Search results for "Father-Child Relations"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

"Come on, Say Something, Dad!": Communication and Coping in Fathers of Diabetic Adolescents

2002

Objective: To investigate fathers’ coping and communication behavior in families with a healthy or a diabetic adolescent. Method: Fathers of diabetic adolescents and healthy adolescents (N 134) were investigated longitudinally with respect to their non-illness-specific coping behavior, their perceptions of family climate, and communicative behavior in solving a joint family task. Data were obtained through questionnaires and content analysis of recordings of verbal communication activity. Results: Based on questionnaire data, few differences were found between diabetic and healthy adolescents’ fathers’ styles of coping with non-illness-specific family problems over time. However, several si…

AdultMaleCoping (psychology)medicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentDevelopmental psychologyNonverbal communicationSocial supportGermanyAdaptation PsychologicalDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansLongitudinal StudiesFather-Child RelationsCommunicationPublic healthMental healthSocial relationDiabetes Mellitus Type 1Content analysisCase-Control StudiesMultivariate AnalysisPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalePsychologyCognitive styleJournal of Pediatric Psychology
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Discrepancies between Mothers' and Fathers' Perceptions of Sons' and Daughters' Problem Behaviour: A Longitudinal Analysis of Parent‐Adolescent Agree…

1998

One hundred and ninety-eight adolescents and their mothers (N = 189) and fathers (N = 136) participated in a 4-year longitudinal study. Adolescent problem behaviour was assessed by the Youth Self-Report (YSR) and the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). In addition, parental stress and marital adjustment were determined. Results showed that mothers and fathers showed high agreement, especially about their daughters, whereas parents and adolescents showed little agreement. Agreement was higher for internalising than for externalising behaviours. In general, adolescents reported more symptomatology than their parents did. However, mothers' ratings of their children's behaviours were significantly…

AdultMaleLongitudinal studyExternalizationAdolescentPsychometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectCBCLChild Behavior DisordersPersonal AdjustmentPersonality AssessmentDevelopmental psychologyLife Change EventsRisk FactorsPerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansLongitudinal StudiesMarriageChildFather-Child RelationsChild Behavior ChecklistInternal-External Controlmedia_commonProblem behaviourSocial perceptionGender IdentityMother-Child RelationsPsychiatry and Mental healthPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalePsychologyJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
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Parental communication and life satisfaction in adolescence.

2014

This study aims to analyze the influence of communication with the mother and father on adolescents¿ life satisfaction, as well as possible indirect effects through self-esteem, feelings of loneliness, and perceived classroom environment. These relationships, and possible gender differences, were analyzed in a sample of 1,795 adolescents (52% male, 48% female) aged 11 to 18 years-old (M = 14.2, SD = 1.68), using structural equation modeling. Results indi- cate a direct effect of communication-mother (girls: ß = .19, p < .001; boys: ß = .16, p < .05) and communication-father (girls: ß = .22, p < .001; boys: ß = .17, p < .05) on adolescent life satisfaction; and also indirect effects through …

MaleLinguistics and LanguagefamilyAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychology AdolescentPersonal SatisfactionLanguage and LinguisticsStructural equation modelingDevelopmental psychologySex FactorsmedicineHumansParent-Child RelationsChildFather-Child Relationslife satisfactionGeneral Psychologymedia_commoncommunicationCommunicationLonelinessLife satisfactionLonelinessMother-Child RelationsSelf ConceptFeelingadolescenceFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyThe Spanish journal of psychology
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Social withdrawal in children moderates the association between parenting styles and the children's own socioemotional development.

2014

Background: Social withdrawal in early childhood is a risk factor for later socioemotional difficulties. This study examined the joint effects of children’s social withdrawal and mothers’ and fathers’ parenting styles on children’s socioemotional development. Based on diatheses-stress, vantage sensitivity, and differential susceptibility models, socially withdrawn children were assumed to be more prone to parental influences than others. Methods: Teachers rated 314 children on prosocial skills, and internalizing and externalizing behaviors at three points in time between grades 1–3. Mothers (n = 279) and fathers (n = 182) filled in questionnaires measuring their affection, and their behavio…

Maleproblem behaviorsocial withdrawaldiathesis–stress modelmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationChild Behaviorsocioemotional developmentDevelopmental psychologyprosocial skillsSocial SkillsChild DevelopmentAffectionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineParenting stylesHumansEarly childhoodSocial isolationChildFather-Child Relationsta515media_commonSocioemotional selectivity theoryParentingparenting stylesErikson's stages of psychosocial developmentMother-Child RelationsDiathesis–stress modelPsychiatry and Mental healthdifferential susceptibility modelProsocial behaviorPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines
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