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WASHINGTON (AFP) - – Children who are over-active, cannot concentrate or act impulsively as early as age three tend to become troubled adults unless they learn self-control along the way, a new study said.
An international team of researchers examined young children in New Zealand and Britain and found that the low-scorers on measures of self-control as kids faced more financial, health and substance abuse problems as they aged. Measures of low self-control in the study of 1,000 New Zealand children included "low frustration tolerance, lacks persistence in reaching goals, difficulty sticking with a task," said the study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Other indicators were "over-active, acts before thinking, has difficulty waiting turn, restless, not conscientious." The children who scored lowest on those counts faced a host of problems as adults, "things like breathing problems, gum disease, sexually transmitted disease, inflammation, overweight, and high cholesterol and blood pressure," the study said. Researchers also saw those children emerge as adults with financial woes, such as credit card debt. "They also were more likely to be single parents, have a criminal conviction record, and be dependent on alcohol, tobacco, cannabis and harder drugs," said the study.
"These adult outcomes were predictable across the entire spectrum of self-control scores, from low to high," said Duke University psychologist Terrie Moffitt, lead researcher on the study. The same researchers also looked at a study of 500 pairs of fraternal twins and Britain and tracked the differences between the lower self-control twin and the higher self-control twin as they aged. "The sibling with lower self-control scores at age five was more likely than their sibling to begin smoking, perform poorly in school and engage in antisocial behaviors at age 12," the study said. Co-author Avshalom Caspi of Duke University said the findings suggest that an individual's ability to exert self-control has an influence of its own and is independent from the environment in which one is raised. "This shows that self-control is important by itself, apart from all other factors that siblings share, such as their parents and home life," said Caspi. The researchers said they found evidence that children who changed their ways and learn to exert more self-control fared better in adulthood than their counterparts, indicating that behavior changes can show positive results.
"The good news is that self-control can change. People can change," said Alexis Piquero, a professor of criminology at Florida State University who was not a part of the study.
Sumber dari Yahoo AFP
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Bak kata pepatah 'melentur buluh biarlah dari rebungnya'..jika diberi didikan yang baik dari kecil dan berada dalam persekitaran sosial yang positif, mudah-mudahan kanak-kanak sedemikian akan menjadi manusia berguna kepada masyarakat kelak. Ahli psikologi terkenal iaitu Maslow sendiri juga pernah mengatakan bahawa beliau boleh membuat seseorang kanak-kanak itu menjadi apa yang diinginkannya apabila dewasa kelak. Hal ini menyokong pendapat oleh Alexis Piquero, profesor yang terlibat dalam kajian tersebut.
2 ulasan:
huhuhuhu...saya dulu time kecik2 boleh di kategorikan hyper active laaa...huhuhuhu...smpai family sy nk bawa p pasar mlm pon takut time sy kecik2 dulu..huhuhuhu....sy lari2...nyorok2 bawah meja org berniaga...mcm2 lagi perkara budak2 bai xwat yg sy wat..hahahahah..last2 dh besau ni ok jer....xde masalah ape2 pon..berjaya juga akhirnya...:)
huhuhuhuhu.....
waaa, dulu sy pun ada msalah hyperactive sejak kecil, smua perkara pun buat ikut suka hati ja. pernah ada beberapa kali orang tua sy terpaksa kurung sy dalam bilik, hahahha!
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