Philip David Zelazo, Destany Calma-Birling, Ellen Galinsky
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引用次数: 0
摘要
执行功能(EF)技能是一系列注意力调节技能,为适应一生中不断变化的环境提供了神经认知基础;童年时期测量的执行功能技能与现实世界中的重要结果(如学业和工作成功)相关联。虽然培训可以提高幼儿的情绪情感技能,但培训的益处往往不能转化为这些结果。我们认为,情商技能与学业成功等结果的关联程度,取决于它们是否首先促进了以情商为基础的中级生活技能,而这些技能对实现关键结果具有更直接的作用。这些有意识的中级技能是特定的 EF 技能和非 EF 技能的组合,在推理和解决各种领域的问题时都会用到。我们进一步认为,弥合具体的 EF 技能与现实世界成果之间差距的有效方法,就是培训人们在社会中有效发挥作用所需的这些基于 EF 的生活技能。我们建议,实现这一目标的最佳方式是采用公民科学方法,让公民(如儿童、青年、家长、教师)从一开始就参与到设计过程中来,从而使干预措施能够满足人们的需求,并解决人们在成功和可持续发展方面遇到的障碍。
Fostering Executive-Function Skills and Promoting Far Transfer to Real-World Outcomes: The Importance of Life Skills and Civic Science
Executive-function (EF) skills are a set of attention-regulation skills that provide a neurocognitive foundation for adapting to changing circumstances across the life span; EF skills measured in childhood are associated with important real-world outcomes (e.g., school and job success). Although training can improve EF skills, the benefits of training frequently fail to transfer to these outcomes. We argue that EF skills are associated with outcomes such as school success only to the extent that they first contribute to intermediate-level EF-based life skills that are more directly instrumental in achieving key outcomes. These intentional intermediate-level skills are configurations of specific EF skills and non-EF skills that are used when reasoning and solving problems in a variety of domains. We further argue that an effective way to bridge the gap between specific EF skills and real-world outcomes is by training these EF-based life skills that people need to function effectively in society. We propose that this can best be achieved using a civic-scientific approach, engaging citizens (e.g., children, youth, parents, teachers) in the design process from the beginning so that interventions are responsive to perceived needs and address perceived obstacles to success and sustainability.
期刊介绍:
Current Directions in Psychological Science publishes reviews by leading experts covering all of scientific psychology and its applications. Each issue of Current Directions features a diverse mix of reports on various topics such as language, memory and cognition, development, the neural basis of behavior and emotions, various aspects of psychopathology, and theory of mind. These articles allow readers to stay apprised of important developments across subfields beyond their areas of expertise and bodies of research they might not otherwise be aware of. The articles in Current Directions are also written to be accessible to non-experts, making them ideally suited for use in the classroom as teaching supplements.