Article type: Original Research
1 September 2011
Volume 36 Issue 3
Article type: Original Research
1 September 2011
Volume 36 Issue 3
An Exploration Into the Coping Strategies of Preschoolers: Implications for Professional Practice
Kirsten Chalmers1
Erica Frydenberg2
Jan Deans3
Affiliations
1
2 e.frydenberg@unimelb.edu.au
3
Contributions
Kirsten Chalmers -
Erica Frydenberg -
Jan Deans -
Kirsten Chalmers1
Erica Frydenberg2
Jan Deans3
Affiliations
1
2 e.frydenberg@unimelb.edu.au
3
CITATION: Chalmers K., Frydenberg E., & Deans J. (2011). An Exploration Into the Coping Strategies of Preschoolers: Implications for Professional Practice. Children Australia, 36(3), 1795. doi.org/10.1375/jcas.36.3.120
Abstract
This study aims to explore the coping strategies of preschoolers, by asking 4-year-old children (N = 46) at an early learning centre in Melbourne to describe their coping strategies when dealing with seven age-appropriate challenging situations. The interviews were recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed. The results indicated that preschoolers could articulate coping strategies that are theoretically clustered into productive and nonproductive coping styles. The capacity to identify a range of coping strategies related to specific situations has implications not only for theory development, but also for the design of effective prevention and intervention programs to help children more effectively deal with life challenges.