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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

An analysis of mind-mindedness, parenting stress, and parenting style in families with multiple children

Graves, Abigail Reid 20 October 2016 (has links)
Mind-Mindedness, a parent’s tendency to attribute thoughts and intentions to his or her child, is related to numerous child outcomes including infant attachment security and child social-cognitive development. Despite established research, the construct is still developing and current research continues to provide clarification. This study sought to contribute to the clarification of mind-mindedness in three main ways. First, the present study examined within-parent consistency with respect to mind-mindedness, parenting stress, and parenting style. Results indicated that parenting stress and parenting style tended to covary for two children in the same family, whereas mind-mindedness did not. Additionally, parents tended to experience different levels of parenting stress or utilize different parenting strategies between their two children. By contrast, significant differences for mind-mindedness were not found. Secondly, the present study examined the relation between mind-mindedness and parenting stress. Results supported an inverse relation between mind-mindedness and parenting stress for the older child. Results also revealed a positive relation between mind-mindedness and parental distress for the younger child; this was specifically relevant for children age 30 months and younger. Multiple interpretations for this finding are explored. Third, this study examined the relations between parenting style, parenting stress, and mind-mindedness. Results indicated two general trends: For the younger children, when parents thought about their child in a more mind-minded manner, they also tended to utilize more authoritative parenting strategies; this parenting style was also related to lower parenting stress. For the older children, when parents thought about their child in a more mind-minded manner, they also tended to utilize less authoritarian parenting strategies as well as experience less parenting stress as related to parent-child dysfunctional interactions. The findings of this study support previous findings regarding mind-mindedness and parenting stress as well as contribute to an improved understanding of the consistency of parenting constructs between two children in the same family and the relation between parenting stress and parenting style. These findings also raise questions for future research with respect to mind-mindedness in very young children. Future research areas and implications are discussed. / Graduate
22

Parents' personality and parents' perceptions of the parent-child relationship as a predictor of social competence in young children.

Pillay, Levandri 27 February 2014 (has links)
Early childhood represents a critical period for the development of social skills and abilities that enhance social competence. One of the main aspects that contribute to this development is the parent-child relationship. The purpose of this study is to explore this area of the parent-child relationship by focusing on parenting personality and parents’ perceptions. The aim of this study was to investigate whether parents’ personality could influence the parent-child relationship and consequently predict social competence in young children. Parents’ personality related to the five personality dimensions as delineated by the Five Factor Model. Parents’ perceptions focused on Attachment, Discipline Practices, Involvement, Parenting Confidence, and Relational Frustration. The study consisted of 62 parents of children between the ages of three and six years old. Participants were asked to fill out three questionnaires, the Parenting Relationship Questionnaire for Pre-schoolers (PRQ-P), the Neuroticism Extraversion Openness-Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI), and the Social Competence Scale (SCS). The five personality dimensions were found to be significantly correlated with parenting perceptions of the parent-child relationship and the preschool child’s social competence. For example Neuroticism, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Conscientiousness were significantly related to Parenting Confidence, however only Neuroticism and Agreeableness correlated significantly with social competence in children. More specifically, Neuroticism was negatively related to Emotional Regulation and Agreeableness was positively related to Prosocial Behaviour. In addition to this regression analyses showed that the parent-child relationship, personality, and social competence were strongly mediated especially with regards to Neuroticism, Parenting Confidence as well as Relational Frustration and Emotional Regulation. Implications of the findings and recommendations for future research were discussed.
23

A study of the parent-child relationship in eight alcoholic patients at the Washingtonian Hospital

Sudenfield, Edward A. January 1952 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University / This study is concerned with eight alcoholic adult patients at the Washingtonian Hospital. The parent-child relationships of these adult patients, when they were children, will be investigated to gain some understanding as to the factors involved in their present alcoholism.
24

The Study of Relationship among bullying behaviors, Emotion Management and parent-child relationship of the Adolescents

Lin, Chia-Ying 02 September 2011 (has links)
The Study of Relationship among bullying beha-viors, Emotion Management and parent-child rela-tionship of the Adolescents Abstract The aim of this study is to investigate the traditional bullying and cyberbullying phenomenon of adolescents in Kaohsiung. This study looks forward to understanding the frequencies of bullying, type of neglect, and the correlation among bullying, par-ent-child relationship and emotion management. The data was collected by means of questionnaires, and the participants were public and private senior high schools and vocational high schools students, junior high school students and high grade elenentary school students. The measurement applied in this study included Parent-child Relation-ship Scale, Emotion Management Scale and Bullying behavior Scale . There were 848 questionnaires given out and 837, effective ones returned. The effective received rate is 98%. They were analyzed by describe statistics, Independent-Sample t-test, One Way Anova, and Pearson Product -moment Correlation. The results of the study are listed as follow: 1. At present, 20% to 30% of the Adolescents who had been bullied or seeing the bully-ing incident in school bullying, and 10% to 20% of the students have ever suf-fered cyberbullying. 2. For the part of school bullying in the Adolescents, boys are more likely to become perpetrators, victims and bystanders than girls and junior high schools than the elemen-tary and high schools. 3. The higher frequency of Internet surfing and more time spend in Internet are more likely to become perpetrators, victims and bystanders. 4. For the part of school bullying in the Adolescents , living with mother are more likely to become perpetrators, victims and bystanders than living with their parents. 5. The higher parent-child relationship could help reduce to become perpetrators, victims, and the Adolescents who obtained more higher Emotion Management would had higher bystanders¡¦ experiences.
25

Contribution of the Home Environment to Preschool Children's Emergent Literacy Skills

Haynes, Rebekah 2010 August 1900 (has links)
Recent and ongoing research has demonstrated the alarming likelihood of children from low-income homes and from ethnic minorities to read at much lower reading levels than their peers. Additionally, reading ability is related to the earliest of emergent literacy skills, which can be measured in young children before they enter formal schooling. The home environment, including the available resources, support for literacy and school, and the parent-child relationship, plays an important role in promoting the development of emergent literacy skills. More research is needed, however, to inform programs and researchers about the specific relationship between the home environment and emergent literacy development. The current study was conducted using a sample of 122 preschool children enrolled in ERF enriched preschool classrooms in one school located in a Southwestern state. The study investigated the power of three variables of the home literacy environment (HLE) (i.e., Family Reading and Writing, External Resources, and Daily Activities) to predict three emergent literacy outcomes (i.e., receptive oral language, alphabet knowledge, and name writing) using canonical correlation analysis (CCA). The study also used commonality regression analysis to examine the shared and unique variance in these emergent literacy outcomes accounted for by the variables of the HLE and the parent-child relationship. The results of the CCA did not find the variables of the HLE to have a statistically significant relationship with the emergent literacy outcomes. Missing data techniques were used to account for incomplete data, and he results were closer to obtaining statistical significance when the more advanced method of multiple imputation was used to account for missing data, with the p-value decreasing from .751 with listwise deletion to between .094 and .504 with multiple imputation. The second analysis of the study, the commonality regression analysis, did find home variables to account for unique and shared variance in the emergent literacy outcomes, particularly in preschool name writing. Specifically, the External Resources scale of the Familia Inventory (Taylor, 2000) uniquely accounted for the smallest amount of variance (i.e., .1 percent) in name writing, while the scores of the PCRI uniquely accounted for the largest amount of variance (i.e., 3.4 percent). When combined together, however, the predictor variables accounted for larger amounts of variance in name writing ability. The Familia Inventory scale of External Resources accounted for the smallest amount of variance when combined with the other predictor variables (i.e., 21.5 percent) while the scores on the PCRI accounted for the largest combined amount of variance, accounting for 31.4 percent of the variance in name writing ability. These results complement and extend on existing research. The findings, limitations, and implications of the results of this study are discussed.
26

Parent identity and youth sport volunteerism

Griffiths, Randall Joseph 05 July 2012 (has links)
Youth sport relies on parents to volunteer for positions at all levels of the organization. Among these volunteer positions, the volunteer-coach is often responsible for the creation and delivery of most services in youth sport. The current scope of youth sport would be unattainable without parents’ continuous support; therefore, recruitment and retention of these parent-volunteer-coaches is a critical task for youth sport organizations. Parents, however, do not respond to volunteer service as would be predicted from current volunteer literature (Kim, Chelladurai, & Trail, 2007). Perhaps is the behavior of volunteers in the youth sport setting is due to their identities as parents. The presence of their children in a youth sport setting has always been assumed to be a primary motivator for parents to volunteer as youth sport coaches. This research used narrative analysis (Polkinghorne, 1995), identity theory (Stryker, 1968, 2000) and inductive coding to interpret the experiences of parent-volunteer-coaches in the youth sport setting. The inductive coding analysis yielded two groups of roles available within the youth sport setting: aspirational roles and avoided roles. The narrative analysis yielded seventeen parent stories by identifying the central plot that connected important events to role choices. Five groups of stories--History, Prior Arrangements, Crucible, Right Role, and System--resulted from an examination of the similarities among the plots. Ultimately, the role choices made in response to tension in each plot led to choosing the volunteer-coach role. These results suggest that the experience of youth sport volunteer coaching is not primarily based on a relationship with the organization. These volunteer stories rarely included the organization as the most important influence on their experience; instead, parent volunteer experiences were driven by identities that led to role choices within the parent-child relationship. Role choices were not static throughout the volunteer experience; several parents continued to shift the roles played in response to changes in perceptions of the context. Youth sport organizations that recognize the impact of the parent-child relationship can design volunteer recruitment and retention programs leading to greater satisfaction for parents while at the same time fulfilling the organizational need for dedicated volunteers. / text
27

Moral responsibilities between parent and children though lifespan

Li, Ying, M. Ed. 09 August 2012 (has links)
The Chinese parent-child relationship is remarkably close throughout the lifespan. Parents get involved in planning their child’s career, social activities, and even marriage. For their point, when adult children attain financial stabilities, they support aging parents in various ways. This report reviews this strong bond as a moral responsibility between parents and children that parents sacrifice for their children unconditionally. In return, children pay back their moral debts to parents by fulfilling filial piety, including doing well in school, respecting family members and supporting parents. However, the traditional parent-child relationship may have changed after the one-child policy due to the shift in family structure, and new roles of only children in the family. Thus, moral responsibilities continue to capture the attention of experts interested in family structure in general and Chinese society in past. / text
28

The contexts of heritage language learning : immigrant Taiwanese mothers and social capital

Liao, Su-Chen 24 March 2011 (has links)
This study explored the contexts that immigrant Taiwanese mothers provided for their American born children concerning heritage language learning. Five immigrant Taiwanese mothers in central Texas participated in this study. To collect data, a qualitative approach was used including in-depth interviews, follow up interviews, supplemental interviews with other family members, and observations of the mothers and their children in different environments. The data was analyzed to answer two research questions: (1) What meanings do immigrant Taiwanese mothers attribute to their American-born children's heritage language? (2) What are the strategies that immigrant Taiwanese mothers describe themselves as using in relation to their American-born children's heritage language learning? This study demonstrated that because of the relative lack of heritage language teaching resources independent of the family, the mothers played an important role in teaching their children a wide variety of languages including Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese, Spanish, Japanese, and Cantonese. Furthermore, the meanings that the mothers placed on heritage language could be categorized into cultural relationships, family bonds, social status within the immigrant community, relationship with American and global societies, and academic achievement and social success. The strategies the Taiwanese immigrant mothers used to teach heritage and home languages were diverse but could be analyzed by the concept of social capital and the theories of Lev Vygotsky. The mothers with more economic capital were able to use their social capital to allow one parent to stay at home teaching their children heritage language full-time. They were also able to purchase other people's time in the form of services and effectively use resources such as the Chinese school or travel to promote heritage language learning. Thus, they could actively pursue and establish goals for their children's heritage language learning. Mothers with less social capital were less able to provide an environment promoting early language learning and instead hoped for other resources in the future. The result was that mothers with more social capital were able to have their children excel in many languages including English, while mothers with less social capital not only had difficulty creating proficiency in heritage language but also in English. / text
29

Parents' Experience of Contradictions in the Context of the Parent-child Relationship During Middle Childhood

Dawczyk, Anna 15 September 2011 (has links)
Parents constantly experience contradictions because children’s development may lead to new or surprising interactions that fail to fit parents’ current ways of thinking about their children. This qualitative study used a dialectical perspective of contradictions from social relational theory to explore how contradictions instigate parental change (Kuczynski & Parkin, 2007; Kuczynski, Pitman, & Mitchell, 2009). Forty families with children aged 8-13 participated in open-ended interviews that were analyzed with thematic analysis. Results revealed that contradictions occurred because of parents’ own incompatible or inconsistent thoughts and/or behaviours, and children’s behaviours. Parents processed and managed contradictions with description, information gathering and reflecting, and acting on contradictions. The nature of the outcome of parents’ contradictions included: outcome not evident, outcome in process, partial strategy or temporary solution and contradiction is resolved. Surprise, sadness, anxiety, stress, and anger were the emotions associated with contradictions. Analyses indicated that parents constantly experience contradictions and few are fully resolved.
30

O desenvolvimento da preocupação materna primaria em primiparas com pre-eclampsia : estudo clinico-qualitativo / The development of the primary maternal preoccupation in primiparous womwn with pre-eclampsia : clinical qualitative study

Fleury, Camila, 1975- 14 August 2018 (has links)
Orientadores: Maria Yolanda Makuch, Mary Angela Parpinelli / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Ciencias Medicas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-14T02:44:34Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Fleury_Camila.pdf: 1750197 bytes, checksum: ecab1a83258efefc9d0f99a995c1c71f (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009 / Resumo: Objetivo: Estudar as vivências e o desenvolvimento da preocupação materna primária de mulheres primíparas diagnosticadas com pré-eclâmpsia. Método: Como marco conceitual para compreender a relação mãe-filho utilizou-se o conceito preocupação materna primária desenvolvido por Winnicott. Foi realizado um estudo clínico-qualitativo. A construção da amostra foi feita por amostragem proposital de homogeneidade ampla, seguindo-se o critério de saturação de informação para a definição do número de participantes. Foram conduzidas entrevistas semidirigidas, utilizando-se um roteiro temático. Todas as entrevistas foram gravadas e transcritas na íntegra. Para a saturação dos dados foi utilizado o referencial teórico sobre a preocupação materna primária. Os dados foram analisados por meio da técnica de análise de conteúdo temática. Resultados: Participaram deste estudo 15 mulheres. O diagnóstico de PE foi uma surpresa para as mulheres, pois até então sua gravidez se desenvolvia sem problemas. Todas as mulheres relataram ter dificuldade para compreender o significado da doença e os episódios de internação. As participantes se referiram a vivências de angústia, solidão, tristeza e ansiedade; e algumas a sentimentos de culpa. A maioria das mulheres teve medo de que seu bebê pudesse morrer ou nascer com complicações ocasionadas por sua doença. O momento do parto foi sentido como um evento repentino e inesperado para as mulheres, distanciando-se de suas fantasias e expectativas e aumentando os sentimentos de falta de controle sobre a situação e medo. Todas relataram que não planejam ter mais filhos, devido ao receio de passarem novamente pela mesma situação. Observou-se nos relatos das participantes que o relacionamento com suas próprias mães influenciou o desenvolvimento de seu papel materno. O apoio da família, principalmente do parceiro, durante a gravidez, parto e puerpério, foi percebido como importante e facilitou a dedicação das mulheres às necessidades do bebê. O apoio dado pela equipe médica também foi sentido como importante. Todas as participantes deste estudo mostraram sinais do desenvolvimento da preocupação materna primária. Durante a gestação já referiam uma aproximação afetiva com o filho, que se manteve e se fortaleceu no puerpério. Na fala das mulheres observou-se o prazer em prestar os cuidados ao bebê, com uma facilidade para interpretar e compreender suas necessidades, além de uma abdicação dos interesses pessoais para se dedicar a esse filho. Conclusão: Mulheres primíparas diagnosticadas com PE, com bebês saudáveis e que permaneceram em contato com elas, sentiram o impacto da doença em suas vidas. Contudo, revelaram-se aptas ao desenvolvimento da preocupação materna primária / Abstract: Objective: Study the life experience of primiparous women diagnosed with pre-eclampsia (PE) and the development of primary maternal preoccupation. Methods: a clinical-qualitative study was performed. Women were selected by purposive sampling of broad homogeneity and the number of participants was determined following the criteria of information saturation. Semi-structured interviews were conducted using a thematic guide. All interviews were recorded and verbatim transcribed. For data analysis Winnicott theoretical concepts regarding the primary maternal preoccupation were used. Furthermore, data was analyzed through the thematic contents analysis technique. Results: A total of 15 women participated in the study. The diagnoses of PE was a surprise to participants because their pregnancy had been without problems. All women had difficulties to understand the meaning of the illness in their lives and of the episodes of hospitalization. Women referred to feelings of anguish, loneliness, sadness and anxiety, in some cases feelings of guilt. Most women felt fear that their baby might die or be born with complication because of their illness. All interviewed women referred that they did not plan on having more children due to the fear of going through the process again. Childbirth was felt as a sudden and unexpected event, different from their expectations and increased their feelings of lack of control and fear. The relationship of the participants with their mothers was related to the development of mother-child relationship. Family support, mainly of their partner during pregnancy, delivery and postpartum, was perceived as important and facilitated their dedication to babies necessities. The support given by health professionals was also perceived as important. All participants had developed signs of primary maternal preoccupation. During pregnancy emotional closeness was observed and this persisted and increased after the baby was born. These women had pleasure in taking care of their babies, were able to recognize and understand their babies' needs and abdicated their own needs and interests to be devoted to their babies. Conclusion: The results of this study show that primiparous woman with diagnosis of PE, whose babies were born healthy and remained with them during postpartum hospitalization, even though they felt the impact of their illness were able to develop a primary maternal preoccupation / Universidade Estadual de Campi / Ciencias Medicas / Mestre em Tocoginecologia

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