# Teaching Experience Correlates with Enhanced Social Cognition in Preschool Teachers

**Authors:** Daniela Molina-Mateo, Ivo Leiva-Cisterna, Paulo Barraza

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jintelligence14010010 · Journal of Intelligence · 2026-01-06

## TL;DR

Preschool teachers with more experience show better social and cognitive skills, which are important for effective teaching and child development.

## Contribution

This study shows that preschool teaching experience enhances socio-affective and cognitive abilities, integrating them over time.

## Key findings

- Preschool teachers outperformed non-teachers in active-empathic listening and emotional self-regulation.
- Years of teaching experience correlated with better emotion recognition and abstract reasoning.
- Socio-affective skills were linked to higher abstract reasoning in preschool teachers.

## Abstract

Preschool teaching is a highly demanding profession that requires constant socio-emotional attunement and the ability to engage in reflective reasoning. Despite the central role of these skills in effective early childhood education, little is known about whether preschool teachers’ socio-affective and cognitive capacities vary as a function of accumulated professional experience. To address this knowledge gap, we compared the performance of 30 professional preschool teachers with a matched control group of 30 non-teachers on tests measuring emotion recognition, active-empathic listening, interpersonal reactivity, and abstract reasoning. We found that preschool teachers were significantly better on all dimensions of active-empathic listening (sensing, processing, and responding) and better in emotional self-regulation than controls. Moreover, years of preschool teaching experience were positively correlated with emotion recognition, improved listening skills, and more deliberate abstract reasoning strategies. Notably, socio-affective competencies were correlated with abstract reasoning performance within the preschool teacher group. According to these results, long-term professional involvement in preschool teaching enhances socio-affective skills and integrates them with higher-order cognitive processes, both of which are essential for responsive teaching, efficient classroom management, and the development of children’s social and cognitive abilities.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

72 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842675/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842675