Parenting stress and child attachment: Child age of 10 and 36 months/father and mother
by Ok, Jeng Hyun, M.S., UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY, 2007, 96 pages; 1445066

Abstract:

Parents are the most affective human environmental resources to children. Although the influences from parents continue even after parents passed away, very young children (up to age 3) get the biggest impact from their parents. According to children's independency to parents, parents' psychological well-being determines children's emotional-social development. However, in parenting stress, children also have their own influence to parents in the family context. Regarding parenting stress, many studies have been dedicated to defining the occurrence, co-occurrence, and predictors of parenting stress of parents in various conditions.

This longitudinal research conducted from surveys with 201 Early Head Start families reexamines the stressors and tests measures to find the most effective identifying variables. Also, the aim of this study is whether fathers' and mothers' parenting stress is different or similar with a child at the ages of 10 months and 36 months.

Additionally, as the children grew, the relations among stressors, parenting stress, and child attachment changed. Children's development can change all circumstances including parents' physical and psychosocial well-being. Further studies need to identify additional sources of parenting stress and the impact of intervention programs on the stressors affecting families raising young children. Also, the Early Head Start program had an effect on the context of parenting stress, so results may have implications for staff of the program.

 
AdviserLori A. Roggman
SchoolUTAH STATE UNIVERSITY
SourceMAI/ 46-01, p. , Nov 2007
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsSocial psychology; Developmental psychology; Clinical psychology
Publication Number1445066
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