Can children provide coherent, stable, and valid self-reports on the big five dimensions? A longitudinal study from ages 5 to 7.

Research on early childhood personality has been scarce. Self-reports of Big Five personality traits were measured longitudinally with the Berkeley Puppet Interview when children were 5, 6, and 7 years of age. For comparative purposes, Big Five self-reports were collected in a sample of college students. The children's self-reports showed levels of consistency and differentiation that approached those of the college age sample. Children's personality self-reports demonstrated significant correlations across the 1- and 2-year longitudinal intervals. Substantial and increasing convergence was found between children's self-reports of Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness and conceptually relevant behavior ratings provided by mothers, fathers, and teachers. Children's self-reports of Neuroticism were unrelated to adults' reports but did predict sadness and anxious behavior observed in the laboratory. The results provide the beginnings of an account of how the Big Five dimensions begin to be salient and emerge as coherent, stable, and valid self-perceptions in childhood.

[1]  O. John,et al.  Handbook of personality: Theory and research, 2nd ed. , 1999 .

[2]  A. Caspi,et al.  A "common-language" version of the California Child Q-Set for personality assessment. , 1992 .

[3]  W. Velicer,et al.  Comparison of five rules for determining the number of components to retain. , 1986 .

[4]  S. Mangelsdorf,et al.  The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development: Implications for the Emergent Self-Concept , 1997 .

[5]  E. Schaefer,et al.  Mother-Infant Interaction and Maternal Psychosocial Predictors of Kindergarten Adaptation. , 1983 .

[6]  P. Costa,et al.  Nature over nurture: temperament, personality, and life span development. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[7]  Marjorie Taylor,et al.  A developmental investigation of children's imaginary companions. , 1993 .

[8]  M. Haith,et al.  The five to seven year shift : the age of reason and responsibility , 1996 .

[9]  David R. Anderson,et al.  Model selection and multimodel inference : a practical information-theoretic approach , 2003 .

[10]  Avshalom Caspi,et al.  Personality differences in childhood and adolescence: measurement, development, and consequences. , 2003, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[11]  I. Mervielde,et al.  The Big Five personality factors as a model for the structure of children's peer nominations , 2000 .

[12]  A. Tellegen Brief manual for the Differential Personality Questionnaire , 1982 .

[13]  H. Kraemer,et al.  The MacArthur Three-City Outcome Study: evaluating multi-informant measures of young children's symptomatology. , 1999, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[14]  R. Shiner,et al.  Linking childhood personality with adaptation: evidence for continuity and change across time into late adolescence. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  J. M. Digman Higher-order factors of the Big Five. , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[16]  T. Achenbach,et al.  Child/adolescent behavioral and emotional problems: implications of cross-informant correlations for situational specificity. , 1987, Psychological bulletin.

[17]  J. P. O'donnell,et al.  Behavior Problems of preschool children: Dimensions and congenital correlates , 1979, Journal of abnormal child psychology.

[18]  G. Saucier Openness versus intellect: Much ado about nothing? , 1992 .

[19]  W. Graziano,et al.  Probing the big five in adolescence: personality and adjustment during a developmental transition. , 1992, Journal of personality.

[20]  C. Edelbrock,et al.  Manual for the Child: Behavior Checklist and Revised Child Behavior Profile , 1983 .

[21]  L. R. Goldberg,et al.  What is beyond the big five? , 1998, Journal of personality.

[22]  A. Caspi,et al.  Personality Development Across the Life Course:The Argument for Change and Continuity , 2001 .

[23]  A. Tellegen,et al.  A developmental perspective on personality in emerging adulthood: childhood antecedents and concurrent adaptation. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  C. Halverson,et al.  The Developing structure of temperament and personality from infancy to adulthood , 1994 .

[25]  Dispositional emotionality and regulation: their role in predicting quality of social functioning. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[26]  H. Marsh,et al.  How do preschool children feel about themselves? Unraveling measurement and multidimensional self-concept structure. , 2002, Developmental psychology.

[27]  R. Eder Uncovering young children's psychological selves: individual and developmental differences. , 1990, Child development.

[28]  I. Mervielde,et al.  Parents' free descriptions of child characteristics: A cross-cultural search for the developmental Antecedents of the Big Five , 1996 .

[29]  P. Costa,et al.  The NEO Personality Inventory: Using the Five‐Factor ModeI in Counseling , 1991 .

[30]  K. Trzesniewski,et al.  A longitudinal study of personality change in young adulthood. , 2001, Journal of personality.

[31]  W. Damon,et al.  Social, emotional, and personality development , 1998 .

[32]  A. Caspi,et al.  The child is father of the man: personality continuities from childhood to adulthood. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  S. Harter The development of self-representations. , 1998 .

[34]  L. R. Goldberg,et al.  Analyses of Digman's child-personality data: derivation of Big-Five factor scores from each of six samples. , 2001, Journal of personality.

[35]  R. Shavelson,et al.  Self-Concept: Validation of Construct Interpretations , 1976 .

[36]  T. Moffitt,et al.  The "little five": exploring the nomological network of the five-factor model of personality in adolescent boys. , 1994, Child development.

[37]  Barbara K. Keogh,et al.  Temperament , 1982 .

[38]  Avshalom Caspi,et al.  Strong genetic effects on cross-situational antisocial behaviour among 5-year-old children according to mothers, teachers, examiner-observers, and twins' self-reports. , 2003, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[39]  R. McCrae,et al.  An introduction to the five-factor model and its applications. , 1992, Journal of personality.

[40]  D. Hay,et al.  Prosocial development. , 1994, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[41]  John A. Johnson,et al.  Handbook of personality psychology. , 1997 .

[42]  Todd F. Heatherton,et al.  Can Personality Change , 1994 .

[43]  O. John The "Big Five" factor taxonomy: Dimensions of personality in the natural language and in questionnaires. , 1990 .

[44]  H. Kraemer,et al.  A new approach to integrating data from multiple informants in psychiatric assessment and research: mixing and matching contexts and perspectives. , 2003, The American journal of psychiatry.

[45]  J. Finch,et al.  The self as a mediator between personality and adjustment. , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[46]  Michael Lewis,et al.  Issues in the Study of Personality Development , 2001 .

[47]  H. Goldsmith,et al.  Genetics of personality: A twin study of the five-factor model and parent–offspring analyses. , 1994 .

[48]  M. Peruggia Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information-Theoretic Approach (2nd ed.) , 2003 .

[49]  S. Srivastava,et al.  The Big Five Trait taxonomy: History, measurement, and theoretical perspectives. , 1999 .

[50]  C. Searle A common language , 1983 .

[51]  S Harter,et al.  The pictorial scale of perceived competence and social acceptance for young children. , 1984, Child development.

[52]  H. Akaike Factor analysis and AIC , 1987 .

[53]  Paul T. Costa,et al.  Set like plaster? Evidence for the stability of adult personality. , 1994 .

[54]  A. Tellegen,et al.  An alternative "description of personality": the big-five factor structure. , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[55]  P. Cowan,et al.  Assessing young children's views of their academic, social, and emotional lives: an evaluation of the self-perception scales of the Berkeley Puppet Interview. , 1998, Child development.

[56]  Avshalom Caspi,et al.  Personality development across the life course. , 1998 .

[57]  O. John,et al.  Los Cinco Grandes across cultures and ethnic groups: multitrait multimethod analyses of the Big Five in Spanish and English. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[58]  B. Roberts,et al.  The rank-order consistency of personality traits from childhood to old age: a quantitative review of longitudinal studies. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[59]  B. Byrne Measuring Self-Concept Across the Life Span: Issues and Instrumentation , 1996 .

[60]  Charles F. Halverson,et al.  Parental Descriptions of Child Personality : Developmental Antecedents of the Big Five? , 1998 .

[61]  Scott A Miller,et al.  Beliefs about Children: A Comparative Study of Mothers, Teachers, Peers, and Self , 1992 .

[62]  W. Mischel Personality and Assessment , 1996 .

[63]  Michael Lewis,et al.  Agreement Among Parents, Teachers, and Children on Internalizing and Externalizing Behavior Problems , 1993 .

[64]  R. Shiner,et al.  How shall we speak of children's personalities in middle childhood? A preliminary taxonomy. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.

[65]  L. Moses,et al.  Individual differences in inhibitory control and children's theory of mind. , 2001, Child development.

[66]  L. R. Goldberg THE DEVELOPMENT OF MARKERS FOR THE BIG-FIVE FACTOR STRUCTURE , 1992 .

[67]  M. Rothbart,et al.  Temperament and personality: origins and outcomes. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[68]  B. D. Raad An expedition in search of a fifth universal factor: Key issues in the lexical approach , 1994 .

[69]  L. Frank The Society for Research in Child Development , 1935 .

[70]  J. M. Digman PERSONALITY STRUCTURE: EMERGENCE OF THE FIVE-FACTOR MODEL , 1990 .

[71]  L. A. Pervin Handbook of Personality: Theory and Research , 1992 .

[72]  K. Tambs,et al.  The EAS temperament questionnaire--factor structure, age trends, reliability, and stability in a Norwegian sample. , 1999, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[73]  P. Costa,et al.  Nature over nurture: temperament personality and lifespan , 2000 .

[74]  I. Sigel,et al.  HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY , 2006 .

[75]  S. Hinshaw,et al.  Internalizing and Externalizing Behavior Problems in Preschool Children: Correspondence Among Parent and Teacher Ratings and Behavior Observations , 1992 .

[76]  J. M. Digman,et al.  The structure of temperament and personality in Russian children. , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[77]  Paul T. Costa,et al.  Evaluating comprehensiveness in personality systems: The California Q‐Set and the five‐factor model , 1986 .

[78]  W. Hartup,et al.  Personality development in social context. , 1995, Annual review of psychology.

[79]  Phyllis C. Blumenfeld,et al.  Change in Children's Competence Beliefs and Subjective Task Values across the Elementary School Years: A 3-Year Study. , 1997 .