Robson,
D. A., Allen, M. S., & Howard, S. J. (2020). Self-regulation in
childhood as a predictor of future outcomes: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000227
This meta-analysis explores whether self-regulation in childhood relates to
concurrent and subsequent levels of achievement, interpersonal
behaviors, mental health, and healthy living. A comprehensive literature
search identified 150 studies that met inclusion criteria (745 effect
sizes; total n = 215,212). Data were analyzed using inverse-variance
weighted random effects meta-analysis.
Mean effect sizes from 55
meta-analyses provided evidence that self-regulation relates to 25
discrete outcomes. Results showed that self-regulation in preschool
(∼age 4) was positively associated with social competency, school
engagement, and academic performance, and negatively associated with
internalizing problems, peer victimization, and externalizing problems,
in early school years (∼age 8).
Self-regulation in early school years
was positively related to academic achievement (math and literacy), and
negatively related to externalizing problems (aggressive and criminal
behavior), depressive symptoms, obesity, cigarette smoking and illicit
drug use, in later school years (∼age 13).
Results also showed that
self-regulation in early school years was negatively related to
unemployment, aggressive and criminal behavior, depression and anxiety,
obesity, cigarette smoking, alcohol and substance abuse, and symptoms of
physical illness in adulthood (∼age 38).
Random effects metaregression
identified self-regulation measurement as the most important moderator
of pooled mean effects, with task-based assessments and teacher-report
assessments often showing stronger associations than parent-report
assessments. Overall, findings from this meta-analysis provide evidence
that self-regulation in childhood can predict achievement, interpersonal
behaviors, mental health, and healthy living in later life.
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