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Dive into the research topics where Holly R. Sexton is active.

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Featured researches published by Holly R. Sexton.


Developmental Psychology | 2007

School readiness and later achievement.

Greg J. Duncan; Chantelle J. Dowsett; Amy Claessens; Aletha C. Huston; Pamela Kato Klebanov; Linda S. Pagani; Leon Feinstein; Mimi Engel; Jeanne Brooks-Gunn; Holly R. Sexton; Kathryn Duckworth; Crista Japel

Using 6 longitudinal data sets, the authors estimate links between three key elements of school readiness--school-entry academic, attention, and socioemotional skills--and later school reading and math achievement. In an effort to isolate the effects of these school-entry skills, the authors ensured that most of their regression models control for cognitive, attention, and socioemotional skills measured prior to school entry, as well as a host of family background measures. Across all 6 studies, the strongest predictors of later achievement are school-entry math, reading, and attention skills. A meta-analysis of the results shows that early math skills have the greatest predictive power, followed by reading and then attention skills. By contrast, measures of socioemotional behaviors, including internalizing and externalizing problems and social skills, were generally insignificant predictors of later academic performance, even among children with relatively high levels of problem behavior. Patterns of association were similar for boys and girls and for children from high and low socioeconomic backgrounds.


Journal of School Psychology | 2015

The stability of elementary school contexts from kindergarten to third grade

Amy E. Lowenstein; Sharon Wolf; Elizabeth T. Gershoff; Holly R. Sexton; C. Cybele Raver; J. Lawrence Aber

The nature and measurement of school contexts have been the foci of interest in community, developmental, and school psychology for decades. In this paper, we tested the stability of six elementary school-context factors over time, using a nationally representative and longitudinal sample of schools from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 1998-1999 (ECLS-K), and systems theories as a conceptual framework. Confirmatory factor analyses and tests of measurement equivalence revealed that six latent factors fit the data equally well across kindergarten, first grade, and third grade: school strain, school safety practices, school academic performance, school instructional resources, positive school climate, and school violence and crime. The factors were highly stable across the early elementary school years, with standardized stability coefficients ranging from .87 to .99 between kindergarten and first grade and from .71 to .98 between the first and third grades. Equivalence in the two sets of stability coefficients was also found across time. Both the magnitude and equivalence of the stability coefficients were robust to the inclusion of five key exogenous school characteristics as covariates in the model. Results suggest that elementary school contexts are remarkably stable over time and shed light on methodological considerations regarding the treatment of school-level measures in analyses that examine links between school context and childrens academic and developmental trajectories.


Child Development | 2012

Longitudinal Links Between Spanking and Children’s Externalizing Behaviors in a National Sample of White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian American Families

Elizabeth T. Gershoff; Jennifer E. Lansford; Holly R. Sexton; Pamela E. Davis-Kean; Arnold J. Sameroff


Merrill-palmer Quarterly | 2009

Increases in Maternal Education and Young Children's Language Skills

Holly R. Sexton; Pamela E. Davis-Kean; Aletha C. Huston


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2011

Child effortful control as a mediator of parenting practices on externalizing behavior: evidence for a sex-differentiated pathway across the transition from preschool to school.

Hyein Chang; Sheryl L. Olson; Arnold J. Sameroff; Holly R. Sexton


Merrill-palmer Quarterly | 2009

Race Differences in Parental Influences on Child Achievement: Multiple Pathways to Success.

Pamela E. Davis-Kean; Holly R. Sexton


Development and Psychopathology | 2013

Deconstructing the externalizing spectrum: growth patterns of overt aggression, covert aggression, oppositional behavior, impulsivity/inattention, and emotion dysregulation between school entry and early adolescence.

Sheryl L. Olson; Arnold J. Sameroff; Jennifer E. Lansford; Holly R. Sexton; Pamela E. Davis-Kean; John E. Bates; Gregory S. Pettit; Kenneth A. Dodge


Archive | 2009

Race Differences in Parental Influences on Child Achievement

Pamela E. Davis-Kean; Holly R. Sexton


Developmental Psychology | 2008

School readiness and later achievement: Correction to Duncan et al. (2007).

Greg J. Duncan; Chantelle J. Dowsett; Amy Claessens; Aletha C. Huston; Pamela Kato Klebanov; Linda S. Pagani; Leon Feinstein; Mimi Engel; Jeanne Brooks-Gunn; Holly R. Sexton; Kathryn Duckworth; Crista Japel


Journal of Family Psychology | 2016

Changes in parents' spanking and reading as mechanisms for Head Start impacts on children

Elizabeth T. Gershoff; Arya Ansari; Kelly M. Purtell; Holly R. Sexton

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Aletha C. Huston

University of Texas at Austin

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Elizabeth T. Gershoff

University of Texas at Austin

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Greg J. Duncan

University of California

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