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Kati Heinonen Katri Räikkönen Pertti Keskivaara Liisa Keltikangas‐Järvinen 《欧洲人格杂志》2002,16(6):439-455
A six‐year longitudinal study investigated the impact of maternal hostile child‐rearing attitudes, role dissatisfaction, and maternal perceptions of adolescent temperamental difficultness on self‐esteem in late adolescence, after controlling for the initial self‐esteem measured in early adolescence. Adolescents (n = 313), derived from the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns study, rated their self‐esteem at the study entry at age 12, and six years later at age 18. Maternal reports of child‐rearing attitudes, of role satisfaction, and of the temperament of the adolescent were obtained at the study entry and three years later. Mother's perceptions of adolescent's temperament as difficult at ages 12 and 15 predicted adolescent's self‐reported self‐esteem in late adolescence, whereas earlier self‐esteem did not predict later perceptions of temperament or parenting. We found no evidence that maternal perceptions of parenting indirectly, or after controlling for the initial level, predicted adolescent's self‐reported self‐esteem. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 相似文献
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The present study was designed to examine whether parents’ views of their child’s academic competencies are structured by
gendered conceptions of abilities. In a longitudinal research design, a group of parents (N = 391) were asked to assess their third-grade child’s competence in mathematics and Finnish and to respond to a set of attitude
statements; when the child reached the fifth grade, the parents were asked to reassess his/her competencies. It was found
that the influence of the gender stereotype was partly domain-specific: The stereotype concerning Finnish organized the parental
competence assessments as early as the child’s third grade and also predicted the assessments made about the child over the
next two grades, whereas the stereotype concerning mathematics only predicted the assessments made as late as the fifth grade.
In the Finnish competence assessments, the gender stereotype moderated the overall gender-of-the-child effect, whereas in
the mathematics competence assessments, the gender-of-the-child effect was evinced only by the parent group that endorsed
the gender stereotype. Culture-bound gender expectations and attitudes toward the expectations are significant, then, for
parents’ assessments of their child’s competencies as early as the elementary school years. 相似文献
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This study examined the role of parents' perceptions of their children's competencies and their educational optimism in forming expectations of their children's further education. A group of parents (N = 352) were asked to estimate the probability of their children's entering gymnasium or vocational school and to assess the child's competencies in the course of primary school years. Parents had crystallized anticipations of their children's further education as early as preschool, and the differences bound to parents' education and child's gender were well established in their expectations. By the end of the 7th school year, the relationships between the expectations and the competence assessments strengthened and became more uniform among parents, although there were also group‐specific profiles. 相似文献
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The study examined children’s and their parents’ and teachers’ perceptions of the malleability of the child’s academic competencies.
A total of 103 third- and sixth-graders and their parents and teachers were asked to rate how much the child could improve
her/his competencies in mathematics and Finnish. The participants were asked to use intrapersonal and interpersonal criteria
in their ratings, i.e., to rate the child’s potential for improvement in comparison with his/her own current competencies
and in relation to her/his peers’ competencies. The results showed a tendency that older children’s perceptions were closer
to their parents’ and teachers’ views than those of younger children. Children of academically educated parents showed a stronger
correlation with their teachers’ and parents’ intrapersonal perceptions than children of vocationally educated parents. The
results also suggested that the teachers and parents trusted in boys’ intrapersonal potential in Finnish more than in girls’
but there were no gender-differences in their perceptions concerning mathematics. In all, the children’s intrapersonal perceptions
of their improvement potential were the most optimistic, followed by their parents’ and lastly by their teachers’ perceptions. 相似文献
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Niina Komsi Katri Räikkönen Kati Heinonen Anu‐Katriina Pesonen Pertti Keskivaara Anna‐Liisa Järvenpää Timo E. Strandberg 《欧洲人格杂志》2008,22(6):553-573
Stability and change in parental extraversion and neuroticism were studied in transaction with their views of their child's temperament from the age of six months to the age of five‐and‐a‐half years in 109 mother–father–child triads (parent–daughter: n = 61, parent–son: n = 48). While parental traits showed high stability, infants' higher positive affectivity predicted an increase in parental extraversion over 5 years, and infant's higher activity predicted a decrease in parental neuroticism. Parent‐rated temperament showed expected heterotypic continuity. Initially higher parental extraversion predicted an increase in the child's effortful control, and higher parental neuroticism predicted an increase in the child's negative affectivity. The results indicate that parental personality and child temperament develop in transaction promoting change in each other. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 相似文献
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Kati Li 《Journal for the scientific study of religion》2013,52(2):309-327
As a medicalized condition, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) sparks considerable public controversy. Previous research has highlighted the importance of examining the factors that influence attitudes toward ADHD. This article examines an understudied factor, religion, and its relationship with ADHD attitudes. Using data from the 2002 General Social Survey National Stigma Study‐Children, this research finds that compared to the rest of the population, evangelical Christians are less likely to view ADHD as a real disease and to believe children with ADHD should be treated with medication. Results also demonstrate that evangelicals are more likely to think doctors are overmedicating children with common behavior problems and to think medication prevents families from working out problems themselves. On the other hand, church attendance is unrelated to beliefs about ADHD treatment but is positively associated with thinking ADHD is a real disease. These findings add new insights to the existing literature on religion and medicalization. 相似文献
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Academically and vocationally educated parents were asked to assess their child's academic competencies and motivation when the child was in preschool, then every 2 years till the end of the child's comprehensive school. It was found that the initial increasing trend in the parental attributions of competence stabilized and even turned downwards and that the education‐ and gender‐bound differences in the attributions, already manifest at the preschool stage, were still in evidence and had got more varied forms. It is suggested that parental perceptions of competencies are activated in a socially structured field of meanings and that highly educated parents construe their educational reality in terms of the social representation of natural giftedness. 相似文献
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Parents' Explanations of Their Child's Performance in Mathematics and Reading: A Replication and Extension of Yee and Eccles 总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5
This study was conducted to examine whether Finnish parents would endorse the the classic gender-related attribution pattern and explain their son's mathematical performance in terms of talent and their daughter's in terms of effort. In addition, we examined whether the pattern of attributions would be the opposite in regard to parental explanations of their child's reading performance. A group of parents (N = 486), both mothers and fathers, were requested to assess the level of competence of their 1st grader in mathematics and reading. The parents were also asked to recall events from their child's 1st school year in which the child succeeded and failed in mathematics and reading; they were then asked to evaluate the importance of talent, effort, and task to the child's outcomes. The parents of boys assessed their child's mathematical competence to be higher than did the parents of girls. Furthermore, the parents of boys rated talent as a more important reason for their child's mathematical success than did the parents of girls. In contrast, the parents of girls rated effort as a more important reason for their child's mathematical success. Although the girls were perceived to surpass boys in reading, the girls' positive outcomes in reading were explained by effort more than the boys' outcomes, and at the highest level of assessed competence, the boys' verbal talent was rated as a more significant cause of success in reading than the girls' verbal talent. In sum, our results suggested that in both mathematics and reading, girls were not entitled to ability-based attribution to the same extent as were boys. 相似文献