ABSTRACT
This study examines child-teacher dependency in preschool as a pathway through which mother-child attachment is associated with children’s behavior problems across middle childhood. Data include direct assessments of attachment security and styles, teacher reports of child-teacher dependency, and maternal reports of behavior problems from the NICHD SECCYD (N = 769 children). Children with more secure attachments at 24 months were less likely to exhibit child-teacher dependency at 54 months. Children with ambivalent, controlling, or insecure/other attachments at 36 months had higher levels of child-teacher dependency at 54 months. Results from multi-level models showed that child-teacher dependency at 54 months was associated with higher levels of internalizing, but not externalizing, behavior problems across middle childhood. Child-teacher dependency partially mediated the association between insecure/other mother-child attachment and internalizing behaviors in middle childhood. Supporting preschool teachers to reduce child-teacher dependency may help ameliorate risk for internalizing behaviors posed by insecure/other attachment.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1. After 3 minutes together in the laboratory, the mother was signaled to leave. The first separation lasted 3 minutes, unless the child was overly distressed. After a 3-minute reunion, the mother left again. The second separation lasted 5 minutes.
2. For the sake of brevity, we do not include the non-significant slope effects in the predictive models because they are close to 0.