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Generational Trends in Children’s Shyness: Does...
Journal article

Generational Trends in Children’s Shyness: Does COVID-19 Matter?

Abstract

Although early childhood shyness is known to portend later internalizing-related problems, we know relatively little about how broad socio-cultural and socio-historical factors shape children’s shyness. In this study, we leveraged the COVID-19 pandemic as a quasi-experiment to examine generational and period differences in parent-reported children’s shyness at the same age in three separate cohorts (N = 648): Generation Z (tested: 1999–2000, n = 217, M = 4.43 years), Generation Alpha: pre-pandemic (tested: 2018–2019, n = 217, M = 4.76 years) and mid-pandemic (tested: 2021, n = 214, M = 4.47 years). The two Generation Alpha groups did not differ on shyness levels despite the pandemic-related social restrictions, and both Generation Alpha cohorts had unexpectedly relatively lower parent-reported shyness levels today compared with Generation Z assessed approximately twenty years ago. Observed behavioral measures of shyness collected prior to the pandemic on a subset of children also revealed lower levels of shyness in Generation Alpha pre-pandemic compared with Generation Z, converging with parent-reported findings of shyness. Findings suggest that generational differences in children’s shyness may result from more protracted socio-cultural influences than from acute period effects such as COVID-19 lockdowns.

Authors

Schmidt LA; Brook CA; Hassan R; Kong X; MacGowan TL; Poole KL; Theall LA; Jetha MK

Journal

Child Psychiatry & Human Development, , , pp. 1–7

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

June 27, 2025

DOI

10.1007/s10578-025-01862-y

ISSN

0009-398X

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