Cortisol across preschool day relates to teacher ratings of executive functioning for children facing economic hardship

TitleCortisol across preschool day relates to teacher ratings of executive functioning for children facing economic hardship
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsBrown ED, Weaver Z, Streich M, Shivde G, Garnett M
JournalEarly Childhood Research Quarterly
Volume62
Pagination31-40
ISSN0885-2006
KeywordsCortisol, Executive functioning, Head Start, Poverty, Preschool
AbstractExperiences of poverty and racism in early childhood can overburden physiological systems that respond to stress with implications for the development of the prefrontal cortex and related executive functioning. The present study is unique in its examination of basal cortisol output across the preschool day in relation to teacher ratings of executive functioning. Participants were 310 children attending Head Start preschool in the United States, a majority of whom were Black, Hispanic, or Asian Heritage. Salivary cortisol was sampled in duplicate at 4 times across 2 days near the beginning of the school year, resulting in a total of 16 samples per child. Several weeks later, the BRIEF-P teacher rating scale assessed various components of executive functioning. Zero-order correlations suggested that basal cortisol output across the preschool day related to each assessed component of executive functioning, as well as to composite scores. Results of hierarchical linear modeling indicated that higher cortisol across the preschool day related to greater difficulties in overall teacher-reported executive functioning, controlling for child age, birth-assigned sex, race/ethnicity, and family income. Implications concern understanding the impact of stress on executive functioning in the preschool classroom and promoting positive outcomes for children facing adversity.
URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0885200622000679
DOI10.1016/j.ecresq.2022.07.006