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Dive into the research topics where Joana Cadima is active.

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Featured researches published by Joana Cadima.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2010

Environmental risk factors and children’s literacy skills during the transition to elementary school

Joana Cadima; Robin McWilliam; Teresa Leal

This study examined the effects of the accumulation of family risk factors on children’s literacy skills, both in preschool and in first grade. Children’s (N = 106) vocabulary, conventions of print, phonological awareness, knowledge of letters, reading decoding, and reading comprehension were assessed. Family risk factors, consisting of household composition, years of maternal education, job situation of the mother, and income level of the family, were combined to create a cumulative risk index. Canonical correlation and multiple regression analyses were performed. Results revealed the negative impact of cumulative risk index on both the preschool and first-grade literacy skills. In addition, the number of risk factors present in the family context negatively predicted the majority of the firstgrade literacy skills, after taking preschool skills into account. The results provide further evidence of the negative impact of the accumulation of family risks on child literacy development and call attention to the importance of early experiences for later academic achievement.


Educational Psychology | 2015

Examining teacher–child relationship quality across two countries

Joana Cadima; Sarah Doumen; Karine Verschueren; Teresa Leal

The present study examined the quality of teacher–child relationships in a collectivist and individualist country, specifically, Portugal and Belgium. Two relationship dimensions were examined the following: conflict and closeness. Participants were 158 Portuguese and 197 Belgian children and their teachers. In both countries, teachers completed the Student–Teacher Relationship Scale (STRS). Measurement invariance was tested through multiple-group analysis. The results supported configural and metric invariance across countries, but not full scalar equivalence, suggesting that the STRS is robust across countries. Some associations differed between the samples. Specifically, teachers’ perceptions of closeness were negatively related to conflict in Belgium, but not in Portugal. Teachers described boys and girls as having similar levels of both conflict and closeness in Portugal, while in Belgium girls are likely to have closer relationships with their teachers. Moreover, observed emotional climate was positively associated with closeness in Belgium (but not Portugal), indicating that Belgian teachers in classrooms with more warm and positive interactions were likely to have closer individual relationships with their students.


Early Education and Development | 2015

Associations Between Early Family Risk, Children’s Behavioral Regulation, and Academic Achievement in Portugal

Joana Cadima; Ana Madalena Gamelas; Megan M. McClelland; Carla Peixoto

Research Findings: This study examined concurrent associations between family sociodemographic risk, self-regulation, and early literacy and mathematics in young children from Azores, Portugal (N = 186). Family sociodemographic risk was indexed by low maternal education, low family income, and low occupational status. Behavioral aspects of self-regulation were assessed using a direct measure called the Head–Toes–Knees–Shoulders task. Results of structural equation modeling revealed that family sociodemographic risk had significant negative effects on behavioral regulation and academic achievement. Behavioral regulation was positively associated with academic achievement when we adjusted for the influence of family sociodemographic risk and child verbal IQ. Furthermore, behavioral regulation mediated the association between family sociodemographic risk and mathematics achievement. Practice or Policy: The results suggest the detrimental effect of family socioeconomic risk in Portugal and the potential importance of behavioral regulation for school success for Portuguese children.


European Journal of Developmental Psychology | 2016

Self-regulation in early childhood: the interplay between family risk, temperament and teacher-child interactions

Joana Cadima; Marisa Enrico; Tiago Ferreira; Karine Verschueren; Teresa Leal; Paula Mena Matos

Abstract This study investigates the interplay between family risk and the quality of classroom interactions and their impact on self-regulation skills in two groups of children—children from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds (at-risk) and non-risk children. Participants included 485 children (N = 93 classrooms)—233 (N = 47 classrooms) of which were from socioeconomically disadvantaged areas. Temperament was measured using teacher report. Trained observers rated classroom quality via live observations of a typical preschool day. Behavioral regulation was assessed using direct measures and emotional regulation was assessed using a teacher report. Analyses using multiple group structural equation modeling showed that at-risk children had lower levels of cool behavior regulation than non-risk children. In addition, classroom quality was positively linked to cool behavioral self-regulation. Moderating effects were additionally found between family risk and classroom quality on both hot behavioral regulation and emotional regulation. Classroom quality served as a protective factor for children exposed to more risk factors. Results showed complex associations between individual characteristics, classroom quality, and family risk, indicating a need to further explore the interplay among these variables.


Research Papers in Education | 2018

The quality of caregiver–child interactions in infant classrooms in Portugal: the role of caregiver education

Sílvia Barros; Joana Cadima; Ana Isabel Pinto; Donna Bryant; Manuela Pessanha; Carla Peixoto; Vera Coelho

Abstract Recent research has shown that caregiver education and training can be important in determining levels of quality in early childhood, but has mainly considered the education and training of the lead teacher. In infant child care, however, classrooms have more than one caregiver with varying levels of education and in Portugal it is less common to have a qualified teacher exclusively assigned to infant classrooms. This study examines the quality of caregiver–child interactions in infant classrooms and its association with caregiver qualifications and training, specifically the level of pre-service education and in-service training of the lead caregiver, whether she is exclusively assigned to an infant classroom or to more classrooms, and the pre-service education of the multiple caregivers in the classroom. Participants were 90 infant classrooms from Porto, Portugal. The CLASS–Infant was used to measure quality of caregiver–infant interactions. Classrooms with one lead caregiver holding at least a bachelor’s degree, whether exclusively assigned to the infant classroom or not, showed higher levels of quality. Few effects were found for in-service training. Results suggest that lead teachers with pre-service education in early childhood are likely to play an important role not only directly by interacting with children but also indirectly through team work.


Early Child Development and Care | 2018

Predictors of parent-teacher communication during infant transition to childcare in Portugal

Vera Coelho; Sílvia Barros; Margaret Burchinal; Joana Cadima; Manuela Pessanha; Ana Isabel Pinto; Carla Peixoto; Donna Bryant

ABSTRACT Although literature reports associations between parent-teacher communication and childcare quality, little is known about how such communications are related to family, child and childcare characteristics. This study examines whether child, family and childcare experience characteristics predict the level of parent-teacher communication, and differences between parents’ and teachers’ reports of communication. Participants were mothers of 90 infants and their teachers in childcare in Portugal. Results show that both parents and teachers report higher levels of communication in higher-quality programmes. Teachers reported more frequent communication than parents. Teachers, but not parents, reported more frequent communication when children spent fewer hours in childcare. Discussion highlights the relevance of monitoring the quality of childcare contexts, especially in early ages, and to increase parent-teacher communication when children spend more time in childcare. The importance of promoting high-quality childcare and accounting for variables at the mesosystemic level of development in teacher training are also discussed.


Psicologia Escolar e Educacional | 2017

Transição para a creche e bem-estar emocional dos bebês em Portugal

Carla Peixoto; Sílvia Barros; Vera Coelho; Joana Cadima; Ana Isabel Pinto; Manuela Pessanha

The present study analyzes the relationship between the implementation of transition practices from home to day care center and the emotional wellbeing of the infants during the first month of attendance in this extrafamiliar environment. Data were collected, before and after the infant entered the day care center, with the mothers and teachers of 90 infants. The results indicated that the number of transition practices reported by teachers is positively associated with the emotional well-being of infants during the first month of day care attendance. These results recommend the implementation of a diversified set of transition practices, before and after entry into the day care center, to facilitate the infants’ adaptation to the new developmental setting.


Journal of School Psychology | 2010

The quality of teacher–student interactions: Associations with first graders' academic and behavioral outcomes

Joana Cadima; Teresa Leal; Margaret Burchinal


Early Childhood Research Quarterly | 2015

Child engagement in the transition to school: Contributions of self-regulation, teacher–child relationships and classroom climate

Joana Cadima; Sarah Doumen; Karine Verschueren; Evelien Buyse


European Journal of Psychology of Education | 2013

Predicting child outcomes from preschool quality in Portugal

Isabel Abreu-Lima; Teresa Leal; Joana Cadima; Ana Madalena Gamelas

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Karine Verschueren

Catholic University of Leuven

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Sarah Doumen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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