4.0 Article

Differences between Young Children's Actual, Self-perceived and Parent-perceived Aquatic Skills

Journal

PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS
Volume 128, Issue 5, Pages 1905-1931

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00315125211017864

Keywords

water safety; swimming; aquatic literacy; motor competence; perceived competence; children; self-perception; parents; proxy report; pictorial scale

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This study examined the differences between young children's actual, self-perceived, and parent-perceived aquatic skills, finding that parents tended to underestimate their children's aquatic skill levels, especially compared to the actual test results. Disagreements between parents and children's self-perceptions were more pronounced in younger children, while older children showed more consistency in their perceptions.
As drowning is a leading cause of unintentional injury/death in children worldwide, perceptions of their actual aquatic skills are of critical importance. Children's self-perceptions may influence the risks they take, and parental perceptions may influence the degree of supervision deemed to be necessary for children in and around water. Accordingly, we examined the differences between young children's actual, self-perceived and parent-perceived aquatic skills. Using a three-way repeated measures ANCOVA, we analyzed data from 134 child-parent dyads (56.0% boys; M age = 7.1, SD = 1.1 years; and 71.6% mothers). We measured self and parental perceptions of the child's aquatic skills with the 'Pictorial Scale of Perceived Water Competence' (PSPWC), and we applied the exact same 17 test items of the PSPWC to assess the child's actual aquatic skill level in the water. Controlling for years of swimming school experience, within-subject differences between the total scores on the 'Actual Aquatic Skills Test' (AAST) and both the child- and parent-completed PSPWC indicated lower than actual estimates of the children's aquatic skill level. The degree of disagreement against the AAST was more pronounced in parents than in 6-7 year-old children but was similar between parents and 8-9 year-old children, with these patterns being evident regardless of the children's sex. Our study contributes to an ongoing validation of the PSPWC and represents a key advance in assessing and comparing children's actual and perceived aquatic skill competence, using perfectly aligned instruments. Future research and practice might explore children's actual aquatic skills in different contexts (e.g., open water), include perspectives of non-parent caregivers and assess perceived and actual water competence across development.

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