The self-concept questionnaire offers a multidimensional, developmentally sensitive measure of the capacity for self-reflection in young children

Yaroslava Goncharova (Lead / Corresponding author), Josephine Ross

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Abstract

Several existing instruments measure development in the content and complexity of young children's self-knowledge, but few measure development in the process of self-reflection. This study aimed to provide a cross-sectional replication and longitudinal extension of the self-concept questionnaire (SCQ), exploring the factor structure and developmental onset patterns proposed in the original paper. We collected parental reports and conceptually replicated the factor structure of the SCQ for 199 participants aged between 14 and 54 months using confirmatory factor analysis. Our data suggest that autonomy first develops at ~14–17 months, followed by self-recognition at ~18–21 months, and self-description/evaluation and emotional response to wrongdoing at ~26–30 months. Contrary to the original scale, we did not find a clear developmental distinction between the onsets of cognitive and emotional self-evaluation. We can conclude that the SCQ factor structure is conceptually replicable and sensitive to developments in the self-system across infancy to early childhood. The SCQ may, therefore, offer a useful alternative or addition to the widely used mirror mark test of self-recognition when measuring the development of self-reflective abilities in young children.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2459
Number of pages16
JournalInfant and Child Development
Volume32
Issue number6
Early online date5 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • mirror self-recognition
  • self-concept
  • self-conscious emotion
  • self-description
  • self-evaluation
  • self-reflection

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Developmental and Educational Psychology

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