Parental beliefs are relevant to child development because they shape parenting behaviors and help to determine and regulate child cognitive and socioemotional growth. Here we investigated cross-cultural variation in Italian and U.S. mothers’ parental beliefs about their social and didactic interactions with their young children. To compare parental beliefs, the Parental Style Questionnaire (PSQ) was administered to samples of 273 Italian mothers and 279 U.S. mothers of 20-month-olds (55% male). To conduct substantive cross-cultural comparisons of beliefs, the measurement invariance of the PSQ was first established by hierarchical multi-group confirmatory factor analyses. The PSQ was essentially invariant across cultures. Italian mothers re...
This study examined cultural differences in mothers’ acceptance of common behavioral parenting techn...
Discrepancies in perceived parenting and parental roles across European countries could be due to th...
This study explores parental ethnotheories of children\u2019s temperament through mothers\u2019 resp...
Parental beliefs are relevant to child development because they shape parenting behaviors and help t...
This short-term longitudinal study investigated cross-cultural universality (similarities) and cultu...
Although a common goal for parents is to promote their children\u2019s successful development in a r...
The present study explored cultural differences in parental beliefs about motor development across 2...
The present study explored cultural differences in parental beliefs about motor development across 2...
What is it to be “an ideal parent”? Does the answer differ across countries and social classes? To a...
What is it to be “an ideal parent”? Does the answer differ across countries and social classes? To ...
This study compared mother-infant interaction and childrearing patterns across Romanian families in ...
Background and Aims. Literature has documented that caregivers from different sociocultural environm...
Every culture has its own needs, its own conceptions of parenting norms, and its own modes of implem...
This chapter presents research that compares Italian and Ecuadorian mothers\u2019 parental ethnotheo...
IntroductionMost studies on parenting and its role in child development are conducted in Western cou...
This study examined cultural differences in mothers’ acceptance of common behavioral parenting techn...
Discrepancies in perceived parenting and parental roles across European countries could be due to th...
This study explores parental ethnotheories of children\u2019s temperament through mothers\u2019 resp...
Parental beliefs are relevant to child development because they shape parenting behaviors and help t...
This short-term longitudinal study investigated cross-cultural universality (similarities) and cultu...
Although a common goal for parents is to promote their children\u2019s successful development in a r...
The present study explored cultural differences in parental beliefs about motor development across 2...
The present study explored cultural differences in parental beliefs about motor development across 2...
What is it to be “an ideal parent”? Does the answer differ across countries and social classes? To a...
What is it to be “an ideal parent”? Does the answer differ across countries and social classes? To ...
This study compared mother-infant interaction and childrearing patterns across Romanian families in ...
Background and Aims. Literature has documented that caregivers from different sociocultural environm...
Every culture has its own needs, its own conceptions of parenting norms, and its own modes of implem...
This chapter presents research that compares Italian and Ecuadorian mothers\u2019 parental ethnotheo...
IntroductionMost studies on parenting and its role in child development are conducted in Western cou...
This study examined cultural differences in mothers’ acceptance of common behavioral parenting techn...
Discrepancies in perceived parenting and parental roles across European countries could be due to th...
This study explores parental ethnotheories of children\u2019s temperament through mothers\u2019 resp...