Frontiers in Psychology (Jun 2019)

The Effect of Social-Emotional Competency on Child Development in Western China

  • Yehui Wang,
  • Zhaoxi Yang,
  • Yingbin Zhang,
  • Faming Wang,
  • Tour Liu,
  • Tour Liu,
  • Tour Liu,
  • Tao Xin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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This study investigated the effects of social-emotional competency on pupils’ academic achievement, academic emotions and attitudes, and interpersonal relationships. Participants were 7106 fourth-grade and fifth-grade students in western China. The results were: (1) social-emotional competency positively predicted pupils’ academic achievement (including reading, mathematics, and science); (2) social-emotional competency predicted pupils’ academic emotions and attitudes, including learning anxiety and interest, and academic emotions and attitudes played a mediating role in the relation between social-emotional competency and academic achievement; and (3) social-emotional competency positively predicted pupils’ interpersonal relationships, including peer relationships and teacher–student relationships, and interpersonal relationships played a mediating role in the relation between social-emotional competency and academic achievement. These findings highlighted the importance of social-emotional competency to child development in western China, where many children might lack their parents’ company.

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