Children's experiences during the prekindergarten period are critical for shaping their emerging self-regulation skills. The purpose of this study was to examine the contribution of teacher-child relationship quality to children's performance on a self-regulation task at the end of prekindergarten. Teachers rated the conflict, closeness, and dependency in their relationships with 104 children in the fall of prekindergarten, and children's self-regulation was independently measured with a visual attention task in the spring of prekindergarten. In addition, teachers and parents rated children's temperamental self-regulation (i.e., effortful control). Results indicate that greater teacher-child dependency predicted children's longer time on the visual attention task, and greater teacher-child closeness predicted children's lower accuracy on the visual attention task. In addition, children who were rated as more self-regulated by parents were more accurate on the visual attention task. The implications of the results are discussed.
Keywords: effortful control; prekindergarten; self-regulation; teacher–child relationship.