A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness

Abstract Children’s playfulness is associated with increased social skills and positively predicts children’s later prosocial skills. Social skills become increasingly important as children enter formal schooling. To understand the role of playfulness in children’s social-emotional development durin...

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Main Authors: Rianne L. van de Weitgraven, Brenda R. J. Jansen, Tycho J. Dekkers, Elian Fink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-09536-4
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author Rianne L. van de Weitgraven
Brenda R. J. Jansen
Tycho J. Dekkers
Elian Fink
author_facet Rianne L. van de Weitgraven
Brenda R. J. Jansen
Tycho J. Dekkers
Elian Fink
author_sort Rianne L. van de Weitgraven
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Children’s playfulness is associated with increased social skills and positively predicts children’s later prosocial skills. Social skills become increasingly important as children enter formal schooling. To understand the role of playfulness in children’s social-emotional development during the first years of school, this three time-point longitudinal study aimed to explore the reciprocal longitudinal associations between children’s self-reported playfulness, teacher-reported social maturity, and peer-reported social preference over time. The sample consisted of 172 children (99 boys [58%], majority White [79.5%]) from England who were first seen at age 5 (M = 63 months, SD = 3.86) and then at ages 6 (M = 73 months, SD = 4.53) and 7 (M = 81 months, SD = 4.69). Findings showed robust longitudinal stability in children’s self-reported playfulness across the three time-points. Children’s own perceptions of their playfulness at age 7 were predicted by teacher’s views of their social maturity and peer-ratings of social preference. As playfulness both drives behaviour and reflects how others judge a child’s behaviour, it is important to consider playfulness when trying to protect and promote children’s social-emotional competencies. Given the rise in play-based pedagogies, further research is needed to explore the impact of context on these findings.
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spelling doaj-art-2fcae3eae9634bc283016a7bbcf68e6d2025-08-20T03:38:16ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-07-011511910.1038/s41598-025-09536-4A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulnessRianne L. van de Weitgraven0Brenda R. J. Jansen1Tycho J. Dekkers2Elian Fink3Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry & Psychosocial Care, Amsterdam UMCDepartment of Psychology, University of AmsterdamLevvelSchool of Psychology, University of SussexAbstract Children’s playfulness is associated with increased social skills and positively predicts children’s later prosocial skills. Social skills become increasingly important as children enter formal schooling. To understand the role of playfulness in children’s social-emotional development during the first years of school, this three time-point longitudinal study aimed to explore the reciprocal longitudinal associations between children’s self-reported playfulness, teacher-reported social maturity, and peer-reported social preference over time. The sample consisted of 172 children (99 boys [58%], majority White [79.5%]) from England who were first seen at age 5 (M = 63 months, SD = 3.86) and then at ages 6 (M = 73 months, SD = 4.53) and 7 (M = 81 months, SD = 4.69). Findings showed robust longitudinal stability in children’s self-reported playfulness across the three time-points. Children’s own perceptions of their playfulness at age 7 were predicted by teacher’s views of their social maturity and peer-ratings of social preference. As playfulness both drives behaviour and reflects how others judge a child’s behaviour, it is important to consider playfulness when trying to protect and promote children’s social-emotional competencies. Given the rise in play-based pedagogies, further research is needed to explore the impact of context on these findings.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-09536-4PlayfulnessSocial preferenceSocial maturityPlaySocial-emotional development
spellingShingle Rianne L. van de Weitgraven
Brenda R. J. Jansen
Tycho J. Dekkers
Elian Fink
A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness
Scientific Reports
Playfulness
Social preference
Social maturity
Play
Social-emotional development
title A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness
title_full A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness
title_fullStr A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness
title_full_unstemmed A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness
title_short A longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity, social preference and children’s perceptions of their playfulness
title_sort longitudinal study investigating the association between social maturity social preference and children s perceptions of their playfulness
topic Playfulness
Social preference
Social maturity
Play
Social-emotional development
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-09536-4
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