• Title/Summary/Keyword: mother's parenting guilt

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The Interaction Effects of the Mother's Parenting Guilt and the Father's Parenting Support on the Parenting Behaviors of Mother with Young Children (영유아 어머니의 양육행동에 대한 양육죄책감과 아버지 양육지원의 상호작용효과)

  • Kim, Eun Young;Lee, Joo-Yeon
    • Journal of Families and Better Life
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    • v.32 no.1
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    • pp.167-180
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    • 2014
  • This study aimed to identify the moderating effect of the father's support on the relationship between the mother's parenting guilt and her parenting behavior. For the goal, the present study 1) analysed the differences in the mother's parenting guilt as the general variables of the mother and child, and 2) examined the main effects and interaction effects between the mother's parenting guilt and her spouse's support on the mother's parenting behavior. The participants of the study were 350 mothers whose infants and toddlers were attending a day-care centers in Gwangju and Jeollanamdo. The summary of this study is as follows. First, the mothers younger than 29 years old reported more parenting guilt than the mothers aged 35 to 39. Also, the working mothers felt more parenting guilt than the unemployed mothers. Second, when the main effect and interaction effects among the mother's parenting guilt, parenting behaviors, and the father's parenting support are analysed, the interaction effects were statistically significant with only rejection control parenting behaviors. The result means that even if the mother feels a lot of parenting guilt, if the father's parenting support is high, her rejection control parenting behaviors tend to appear less. The present study suggests that the father's parenting support plays an important role in the reduction of the mother's negative parenting behaviors.

The Influential Factors on Parenting Guilt of Mothers using a Day-care Center (보육시설 이용 어머니의 양육죄책감 영향요인 연구)

  • Lee, Joo Yeon
    • Korean Journal of Childcare and Education
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    • v.10 no.3
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    • pp.159-177
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    • 2014
  • The purpose of this study was to examine the influential factors on parenting guilt of mothers who use a day-care center. To achieve these research goals, the present study 1) analysed the differences in the mother's parenting guilt as the socio-demographic variables of the mother and child, and 2) examined the relative effect size of influences on the mother's parenting guilt with their parenting efficacy, satisfaction on the day-care center, emotional and informational support from teachers, and mother's active interaction with day-care teachers. The participants of the study were 350 mothers whose infants and toddlers were attending day-care centers in Gwangju and Jeollanamdo. The results of this study are as follows. First, the mothers with infants who were younger than 3 years old reported more parenting guilt than the mothers with toddlers. Second, the mothers whose children were the first child reported more parenting guilt than the mothers with children who were the second or the third child. Third, the emotional support from the day-care teacher was the most influential factor on the mother's parenting guilt. This study suggests that the mutual cooperation between mother and day-care teacher are very important to reduce the mother's parenting guilt.

Effects of Mother's Smartphone Dependency and Maternal Guilty Feelings on Early Childhood Emotion Regulation (어머니의 스마트폰 의존과 양육죄책감이 유아의 정서조절에 미치는 영향)

  • Bae, Seon Mee;Choi, Young Hee;Song, Seung Min;Cha, Seung Eun
    • The Korean Journal of Community Living Science
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    • v.28 no.2
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    • pp.301-312
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    • 2017
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of mother's smartphone dependency and maternal guilty feelings on early childhood emotion regulation. The subjects were 326 mothers of 2 to 5 year olds. Mothers' smartphone dependency was assessed by the Korea Agency for Digital Opportunity & Promotion(2006), guilty feelings by the Maternal Guilt Scale(Sung 2011), and early childhood emotion regulation assessed by the ERC(Park 2012). The results of the study were as follows. First, mother's dependency on smartphones was highly related with early childhood emotion regulation. Maternal guilty feelingswere weakly related with child's emotion regulation. Relationship between mother's dependency on smartphones and maternal guilty feelingswasmoderate. Second, mother's positive expectations towardssmartphones and maternal guilty feelings from negative parenting behavior explained early childhood emotion regulation as much as 69%.