A Yoga Intervention for Young Children: Self-Regulation and Emotion Regulation

Yoga-based interventions have been implemented in schools and demonstrated promising results on students’ self-regulation outcomes. Nevertheless, there is limited literature on the effects that yoga may have for children in the early primary grades, despite the evidence demonstrating that this is an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of child and family studies 2021-08, Vol.30 (8), p.2028-2041
Hauptverfasser: Rashedi, Roxanne N., Rowe, Susan E., Thompson, Ross A., Solari, Emily J., Schonert-Reichl, Kimberly A.
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container_end_page 2041
container_issue 8
container_start_page 2028
container_title Journal of child and family studies
container_volume 30
creator Rashedi, Roxanne N.
Rowe, Susan E.
Thompson, Ross A.
Solari, Emily J.
Schonert-Reichl, Kimberly A.
description Yoga-based interventions have been implemented in schools and demonstrated promising results on students’ self-regulation outcomes. Nevertheless, there is limited literature on the effects that yoga may have for children in the early primary grades, despite the evidence demonstrating that this is an opportune period in development for early self-regulation. Few studies have focused on young children living in the context of economic difficulty, which can hinder children’s development of self-regulatory skills and educational trajectories. The effects of an eight-week yoga intervention on economically disadvantaged pre-kindergarten and kindergarten children’s self-regulation and emotion regulation were examined via a paired within-subjects comparison study. Nine classrooms were assigned to the yoga intervention (Treatment First, TxFirst; n  = 90) or a wait-list control group (Treatment Second, TxSecond; n  = 64). All children were assessed at pre-intervention (Time 1), post-intervention assessment for TxFirst (Time 2), and post-intervention assessment for TxSecond (Time 3). Children demonstrated significant predicted gains on a behavioral task of self-regulation and declines in teacher-rated submissive venting and total behavior problems. Implications for future research are discussed, with a focus on including follow-up assessments and multiple dimensions of fidelity of implementation. Highlights Yoga-based interventions have been implemented in schools and demonstrated promising results on students’ self-regulation outcomes. There is limited literature on the effects that yoga may have for children in the early primary grades, despite the evidence demonstrating that this is an opportune period for early self- regulation. Effects of an eight-week yoga intervention on economically disadvantaged pre-kindergarten and kindergarten children’s self-regulation and emotion regulation were examined via a paired within- subjects comparison study. Children demonstrated significant predicted gains on a behavioral task of self-regulation and declines in teacher-rated submissive venting and total behavior problems.
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subjects Analysis
Behavior
Behavior problems
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child and School Psychology
Child development
Classrooms
Control Groups
Emotional regulation
Fidelity
Intervention
Kindergarten
Kindergarten students
Laws, regulations and rules
Original Paper
Primary Education
Psychology
Self regulation
Social Sciences
Sociology
Teachers
Yoga
Young Children
title A Yoga Intervention for Young Children: Self-Regulation and Emotion Regulation
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