THE STUDY OF RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MATERNAL “EMOTION SOCIALIZATION†AND CHILDREN'S SOCIAL COMPETENCE: THE ROLE OF CHILD TEMPERAMENT
Abstract
- The present study were to describe and provide initial support for the validity of the Future Scenarios Questionnaire (FSQ) based on a translation of the Lundell’s (2008) original instrument, a new self-report questionnaire designed to measure parental responding to anticipated children’s negative emotions; and to examine how maternal responses on the FSQ related to young children’s aggressive, asocial, and prosocial behaviors with peers. Further, this study examined whether the temperamental trait of negative affect moderated the relation between maternal responses on the FSQ and children’s social adjustment outcomes. Participants were 107 mothers of preschool-age children. Mothers were requested to provide ratings on the FSQ and child temperament ratings on the Child Behavior Questionnaire (CBQ; Rothbart, Ahadi, & Hershey, 1994). They also completed a range of measures which were designed to assess the construct validity of the FSQ. These included measures of attachment representations, maternal mind-mindedness, perceived control, and alexithymia. Thirty-two teachers provided ratings on the Child Behavior Scale (CBS; Ladd & Profilet, 1996) for children’s aggressive, asocial, and prosocial behaviors in the peer context. Factor analysis of the FSQ revealed two subscales: Encourage Emotion Expression (EEE) and Discourage Emotion Expression (DEE). Further, the results of the moderation analyses showed that maternal responding on the FSQ interacts with negative affect in the prediction of child behaviors, but not in the hypothesized ways. In particular, discouraging emotion expression significantly predicted less asocial behavior and more prosocial behavior (approached significance), but only for children rated high in negative affect. None of these relations was significant for children rated low in negative affect. The theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed in terms of the importance of child temperament in emotion socialization processes.
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Year
- 2020
Author
-
Yu Yu Khaing
Subject
- Psychology
Publisher
- Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science (MAAS)