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Age- and Schooling-Related Effects on Executive...
Journal article

Age- and Schooling-Related Effects on Executive Functions in Young Children: A Natural Experiment

Abstract

We employed a cutoff design in order to examine age- and schooling-related effects on executive functions. Specifically, we looked at development of working memory and response inhibition over the period of 1 school year in prekindergarten and kindergarten students born within 4 months of each other. All children improved on executive function and word-decoding tasks from the beginning to the end of the year. Additionally, we found prekindergarten- and kindergarten-schooling effects for the working memory and word-decoding tasks (p < .05), and a trend-level prekindergarten-schooling effect for the response inhibition task (p < .10).

Authors

Burrage MS; Ponitz CC; McCready EA; Shah P; Sims BC; Jewkes AM; Morrison FJ

Journal

Child Neuropsychology, Vol. 14, No. 6, pp. 510–524

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

November 12, 2008

DOI

10.1080/09297040701756917

ISSN

0929-7049

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