• Title/Summary/Keyword: maternal acceptance-rejection

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Model Analysis on Factors Affecting Maternal Acceptance - Rejection - Mediating Effects of Parenting Stress - (어머니의 수용-거부에 영향을 미치는 요인에 관한 모형분석 - 양육스트레스의 매개효과를 중심으로 -)

  • Lee, Ju Lie
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.57-71
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    • 2008
  • This study examined the influences on maternal acceptance-rejection and mediating effects of parenting stress. Participants were 150 mothers of children aged 3 to 6 in Seoul and Jeju. Research questions were analyzed by structural equation modeling. Results showed that children's age, congenital diseases or anomalies, planned pregnancy, and father's occupation influenced maternal acceptance-rejection directly. Mothers' perceived treatment in childhood and fathers' age influenced parenting stress; parenting stress, in turn, influenced maternal acceptance-rejection. Fathers' age influenced parenting stress negatively; parenting stress, in turn, influenced maternal acceptance-rejection positively.

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Influences of Children's Perceived Maternal Acceptance-Rejection and Self=evaluation on Learned Helplessness (아동이 지각한 어머니의 양육행동과 자기 평가가 학습된 무력감에 미치는 영향)

  • 손낙주
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.245-257
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    • 1996
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the influences of children's perception of maternal acceptance-rejection and self-evaluation on learned helplessness. The Subjects were 371 fifth and sixth grade children. The helplessness scale, PAQ, PARQ were used. The data was analyzed by factor analysis, MANOVA, ANOVA and path analysis which was made through multiple regression analysis. The results were as follows: 1. The children's perceived maternal acceptance was significantly different depending on their parent's education level. In children's perceived parental rejection, there were gender differences. 2. In the children's self-evaluation, there were an interaction effect determined by the child's sex and the mother's education level, and a main effect of mother's education level. 3. Children's learned helplessness was significantly different depending on their mother's education level. 4. Children's perceived maternal acceptance(β=-0.36, p<.01) and rejection (β=0.17, p<.01) had a direct impact on their self-evaluation. Their self-evaluation(β=0.54, p<.01) and perceived maternal rejection(β=0.16, p<.01) had a direct impact on learned helplessness, but perceived maternal acceptance didn't have a direct impact on learned helplessness.

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The Relationships Among Maternal Behavior, Self-Esteem & Their Elementary School Children's Self-Esteem (어머니의 자아존중감 및 양육태도와 학동기 자녀의 자아존중감과의 관계연구)

  • Son, Hwa-Hee;Yoon, Chong-Hee
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.58-71
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    • 1990
  • The purpose of the study was to investigate the mother-child interactions in terms of maternal child- rearing behavior, maternal self-esteem, and their school-age children's self-esteem. The subjects were, all living in the Seoul area. A pre-test was conducted twice on 98 subjects. Each time the values of Chronbach's ${\alpha}$ were obtained on maternal behavior, maternal self-esteem and children's self-esteem. Data analysis was by ANOVA, Pearson's product-moment correlation. multiple regression analysis. Chronbach's ${\alpha}$, and factor analysis. Children's self-esteem was positively related (1) to family background factors:educational level, employment status of mothers, social economic status, and number of siblings (2) to maternal self-esteem and (3) to maternal child-rearing behavior in the dimensions of affection, acceptance, and encouragement of independency. Children's self-esteem was negatively related to maternal child-rearing behavior in the dimensions of hostility, rejection and encouragement of dependency. The relative importance of independent variables on children's self-esteem was found to be in the following order:mother's educational level. social economic status, and number of siblings (${\beta}=0.5935$, p< .001), maternal child-rearing behavior in the affection-hostility dimension (${\beta}=0.0849$, p< .001), and in the acceptance-rejection dimension(${\beta}=0.0365$, p< .05). The regression model showed that 25 percent of the children's self-esteem could be accounted for by family background factors. and maternal child-rearing behavior in the affection-hostility dimension and the acceptance-rejection dimension ($R^2=0.25$).

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Moderating Effects of Parental Rejection on the Relationship between Corporal Punishment and Psychological Maladjustment of Children (부모 체별과 아동의 심리적 부적응 관계에서 부모 거부의 중재효과)

  • Yi, Su Hee;Lee, Jae Yeon
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.29 no.6
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    • pp.135-146
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    • 2008
  • This study explored moderating effects of parental rejection on the relationship between corporal punishment and psychological maladjustment of 348 5th and 6th grade elementary school children. Participants responded in school to the Physical Punishment Questionnaire(Rohner, 1997), Parental Acceptance-Rejection Questionnaire(Rohner, 1991), and the Personality Assessment Questionnaire(Rohner, 1991). Results of regression analyses showed that both parental punishment and parental rejection made significant contributions to children's psychological maladjustment. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that parental punishment made significant contributions to maladjustment only when it was influenced by perceived maternal rejection. Conclusions were that apparent relations between parental punishment and children's psychological maladjustment were moderated by children's perceptions of maternal rejection.

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The Relationship between School Bullying and Perceived Parenting Practices of Adolescents (학교 따돌림과 청소년이 지각한 부모의 양육행동과의 관계)

  • Kim, Dong-Hee;Kim, Young-Shin;Koh, Yun-Joo;Leventhal, Bennett L.
    • Journal of the Korean Society of School Health
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.89-96
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    • 2010
  • Purpose: To examine whether three, specific maternal and paternal parenting are associated with school bullying. Methods: A longitudinal study was conducted among 1585 seventh and eighth-grade students in two middle schools participated in the study between 2000 and 2001. The instruments were the Korean Peer Nomination and Childrearing Behavior Questionnaire (measuring three dimension of parenting practice: Warmth/acceptance, rejection/restriction, and permissiveness-nonintervention). Descriptive and multiple logistic regression analyses were performed. Results: The ORs of perpetrator with maternal rejection/restriction parenting was 1.065 (confidence interval: 1.008~1.126). Conclusion: Adolescents who were experiencing maternal rejection/restriction was at significantly increased risk for being perpetrators. Development of preventive and intervention programs with the goal of improving parenting skills may help to reduce adolescent school bullying.

Bullying and Victimization with Perception of Parenting Behaviors among Elementary School Children (학령기 아동이 지각한 부모의 양육행동 및 또래 괴롭힘 경험)

  • Ro, Kyung-son;Sim, Hee-og
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.241-257
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    • 2004
  • Data were collected from 514 elementary school students from 1st to 6th grade with questionnaires on Parental Behavior, Bullying, and Peer-Victimization. Sixth graders reported the lowest perception of warmth-acceptance, and 1st graders reported the highest perception of rejection-restriction by fathers. Males perceived more parental rejection-restriction. Children perceived more warmth-acceptance from mothers, and they perceived more permissiveness-nonintervention from fathers. Parenting behaviors were significantly related to bullying and victimization. The Bullying/Victimization group reported the lowest parental warmth-acceptance. Both Victimization and Bullying/Victimization groups showed higher parental rejection-restriction than other groups. The Victimization group showed highest paternal permissiveness-nonintervention. Victimization and Bullying/Victimization groups reported higher maternal permissiveness-nonintervention than other groups.

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The Pathways from Maternal Parenting Behavior to Children's School Adjustment : The Mediating Effects of Children's Emotional Intelligence (어머니의 양육행동이 아동의 학교생활적응에 영향을 미치는 경로 : 아동의 정서지능의 매개적 역할)

  • Cha, Sung-Hye;Doh, Hyun-Sim;Choi, Mi-Kyung
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.125-137
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    • 2010
  • This study examined the pathways from maternal parenting behavior to children's school adjustment through children's emotional intelligence. The participants in this study were 436 elementary school 4th-6th graders (of which 233 were boys, and 203 were girls) in Seoul. They completed questionnaires on maternal parenting behavior, children's emotional intelligence, and levels of school adjustment. Data were analyzed by means of Pearson's correlation coefficients and structural equation modeling. It was found that maternal parenting behavior indirectly, but not directly, influenced children's levels of school adjustment through children's emotional intelligence. Children's emotional intelligence mediated the effects of maternal warmth/acceptance and rejection/restriction on levels of children's school adjustment. These results clearly indicate that emotional intelligence plays a crucial role in improving the levels of children's school adjustment.

Effects of Mother's Personality Traits on Maternal Childrearing Behaviors (어머니의 성격특성이 양육행동에 미치는 영향 - 양육행동에 대한 어머니와 아동의 지각 차이를 중심으로 -)

  • Park, Young Yae;Choi, Young Hee;Park, In Jeon
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.71-88
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    • 2002
  • The subjects of this study on the effects of mother's personality on her childrearing behaviors were 1060 mothers and their $5^{th}$ grade children. Results indicated that maternal childrearing behaviors were related to her personality traits. The effects of mother's personality on her childrearing behaviors varied by sex of child, reporter (mother/child), and childrearing behavior factors. Mother-reported childrearing behaviors correlated more highly with her personality than child-reported behaviors. Behaviors reported by girls provided higher correlations between mother's personality and childrearing dimensions than reports by boys. Mother's personality traits showed differential correlations with childrearing dimensions of Rejection-Restriction (R R) and Warmth-Acceptance (W A) by reporter and sex of child. R R was affected by mother's Impulsiveness more among girls than among boys. Maternal Superiority increased W A toward boys while maternal Responsibility increased W A toward girls.

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Patterns of Infant-Mother Attachment and Related Variables (영아-어머니간의 애착유형과 그 관련변인)

  • Park, Ung Im
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.16 no.1
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    • pp.113-131
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    • 1995
  • The objectives of this study were to investigate (1) the relations between infant-mother attachment and maternal sensitivity, maltreatment, stress, and childhood experience, and (2) relations between infant-mother attachment and infant temperament. The subjects of the study were 55 14 to 20 month-old infants (27 boys and 28 girls) and their mothers in Seoul. In order to assess the patterns of infant-mother attachment, each infant-mother dyad was videotaped in the modified Ainsworth's Strange Situation. Each dyad was filmed for 3 minutes in the Questionnaire Situation of Smith and Pederson(Smith, & Pederson, 1988) to assess maternal sensitivity responding to infant's cues. Each mother also was interviewed by using a semi-structured questionnaire made by author to measure maternal maltreatment. Each mother was asked to complete three Likert-type questionnaires, containing Parenting Stress Index (PSI) (Abidin, 1990) to measure the maternal stress, Mother-Father Peer Scale (MFPS) (Epstein, 1983) to measure childhood experience, and Emotionality, Activity, Sociality (EAS) (Buss, & Plomin, 1984) to measure infant's temperament. The statistical procedures used for data analyses were correlation, one-way ANOVA, multiple regression, and Cronbach's ${\alpha}$ coefficient. The results showed that (1) mothers of insecure-avoidant infants maltreated their infants more than mothers of secure infants, and (2) in the multiple regression analysis, maternal maltreatment was predicted by maternal education, maternal stress (parent domain), and maternal childhood experience in relation to her own mother (acceptance vs. rejection).

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Children s Peer Competence in relation to Maternal Parenting Styles and Children's Emotion regulation (어머니의 앙육태도 및 아동의 정서조절 능력과 또래 유능성간의 관계)

  • 임연진
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.113-124
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    • 2002
  • This study examined the relationships of children's peer competence with maternal parenting styles and children's emotion regulation. Thirty boys and thirty-one girls in 3 to 6 years of age and their mothers participated. Mothers responded to Parental Acceptance-Rejection Questionnaire(Hwang, 1997), and teachers rutted each child using Peer Competence Scale(Park & Rhee, 2001) and Emotional Intelligence Scale(Lee, 1997). Mothers'acceptive parenting style and children's abilities to regulate emotion were positively related to children's peer competence. Children's emotion regulation rather than mothers' parenting styles predicted peer competence.