Pekka Salonen (1), Janne Lepola (1), Marja Vauras (1)
(1) University of Turku, Finland
Abstract, In this exploratory study we conceptualized and explored socio-cognitive, emotional and motivational regulatory
processes displayed in scaffolding interaction between parents and their non-task and task-oriented children. Based on the dynamic
systems view and findings from developmental research, we assumed that parents with non-task oriented and task-oriented children have
formed differential multimodal interaction patterns which have been stabilized during repeated parent-child scaffolding episodes. We
hypothesized that, in comparison with task-oriented parent-child dyads, parents with non-task oriented children would show more
non-optimal patterns in socio-cognitive, motivational, and emotional realms of scaffolding regulation. The sample consisted of 11
task-oriented and 12 non-task oriented (extremely task-avoidant or socially dependent) 7-year-old children with their parents. The
children worked on picture arrangement and brick construction tasks. The quality of parent-child regulation was assessed both by
global rating scales and by a micro-analytic procedure focused on dyadic coordinations (e.g., parental intrusiveness, directiveness,
modulation of emotions and expectations). Global ratings and micro-analyses did reveal group level differences in socio-emotional
regulation but not in socio-cognitive and motivational regulation.
Dans la présente etude exploratoire, nous avons conceptualisé et examiné des processus régulateurs sociocognitifs, émotionnels et
motivationnels intervenant dans l'étayage interactionniste parent-enfant avec ou sans la motivation intrinsèque envers la tâche. Sur
la base des approches de systèmes dynamiques et des résultats de recherches antérieures, nous avons postulé que l'étayage parental
chez les enfants avec la motivation envers la tâche a formé des modèles interactionnistes multidimensionnels différant de ceux sans
la motivation envers la tâche. Ces modèles différents se seraient stabilisés lors d'épisodes répétés d'étayage parental. Nous avons
émis l'hypothèse que les parents qui ont des enfants sans la motivation envers la tâche auraient plus de modèles non optimaux en
situation d'étayage liée aux processus régulateurs sociocognitifs, émotionnels et motivationnels, en comparaison aux situations
dyadiques parent-enfant avec la motivation envers la tâche. Notre corpus consistait en 11 enfants avec la motivation et 12 enfants
sans la motivation envers la tâche (ces derniers extrêmement évasifs ou socialement dépendants) âgés de sept ans et en leurs parents.
Dans l'expérimentation, il s'agissait de leur proposer des tâches d'agencement d'images et d'un jeu de construction. La qualité de la
régulation de l'interaction de tutelle parent-enfant a été mesurée par une échelle d'évaluation globale et par une étude
microanalytique centrée sur des situations de coordination dyadiques (i.e., l'intrusion parentale, l'attitude directive, la modulation
émotionnelle et les attentes). Il ressort des analyses, à l'échelle globale et microanalytique, que l'hypothèse des différences au
niveau des groupes s'avère juste en ce qui concerne la situation de régulation émotionnelle mais pas celle de régulation
sociocognitive et motivationnelle.
Key words: Multimodal regulation, Parent-child dyads, Scaffolding.
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