Parenting during toddlerhood: Contributions of parental, contextual and child characteristics

Publication date

2007

Authors

Verhoeven, MarjoleinISNI 0000000391364821
Junger, M.ISNI 0000000028643957
van Aken, C.ISNI 0000000391482625
Dekovic, MajaISNI 0000000385736078
van Aken, MarcelISNI 0000000114926849

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The present study examines the contribution of parental, contextual, and child characteristics to parenting behavior during toddlerhood in 111 two-parent families with a 17-month-old son (M = 16.9 months, SD = 0.57). Parenting was conceptualized in terms of five dimensions: support, structure, positive discipline, psychological control, and physical punishment. In general, results indicate that the effects of parental, contextual, and child characteristics on parenting dimensions do not differ for mothers and fathers. The only uncovered difference concerns the effect of children's inhibitory control, which was significant for maternal but not for paternal support. For both mothers and fathers, support, structure, and the use of psychological control are mainly influenced by parental characteristics, whereas the use of positive discipline and physical punishment are best predicted by contextual characteristics. Overall, the contribution of child characteristics to parenting dimensions was moderate. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)

Keywords

Taverne

Citation

Verhoeven, M, Junger, M, van Aken, C, Dekovic, M & van Aken, M 2007, 'Parenting during toddlerhood: Contributions of parental, contextual and child characteristics', Journal of Family Issues, vol. 28, no. 12, pp. 1663-1691. https://doi.org/10.1177/0192513X07302098