The social support networks of 25 Puerto Rican single mothers of young children with disabilities were examined and compared with current models of family support for children with disabilities. This study was designed to assess the support systems of Latino single mothers in light of dominant models of family support. The Family Support Scale, the ECOMAP, and responses to open-ended questions were employed to describe the characteristics of Puerto Rican single mothers\u27 support systems. Study findings suggest that members of the children\u27s immediate and extended kinship system, including non-blood relatives (e.g., madrinas), play a strong role in the support network of the mothers interviewed. Implications for early childhood professi...
In the last decades, there has been a steady increase in single parent families (Cheeseman, Ferguson...
This is a descriptive study of the statistical association between the amounts of financial—emotiona...
Family is the fi rst and most important social network for each person. The phenomenon of a disabili...
The social support networks of 25 Puerto Rican single mothers of young children with disabilities we...
Compares family sources of support perceived by 55 Puerto Rican mothers of young children with disab...
The study compared the family needs and sources of support as perceived by 55 Puerto Rican mothers o...
The study compared the family needs and sources of support as perceived by 55 Puerto Rican mothers o...
Research shows that mothers who raise a child with a severe intellectual disability may experience m...
The population served by early interventionists has changed to include more migrant families. Althou...
P(論文)This study examined the significance of family support for children with disabilities. The cont...
There is a strong research evidence showing the crucial role of social support networks in defining ...
We interviewed 200 Latino parents (50 Mexican couples, 50 Puerto Rican couples) living in the United...
Objective: to understand and identify the support network and social support from the perspective of...
This is a study of the ways in which Puerto Rican women cope with the financial and parental stress ...
This study seeks to identify the formation of social support networks of people with physical disabi...
In the last decades, there has been a steady increase in single parent families (Cheeseman, Ferguson...
This is a descriptive study of the statistical association between the amounts of financial—emotiona...
Family is the fi rst and most important social network for each person. The phenomenon of a disabili...
The social support networks of 25 Puerto Rican single mothers of young children with disabilities we...
Compares family sources of support perceived by 55 Puerto Rican mothers of young children with disab...
The study compared the family needs and sources of support as perceived by 55 Puerto Rican mothers o...
The study compared the family needs and sources of support as perceived by 55 Puerto Rican mothers o...
Research shows that mothers who raise a child with a severe intellectual disability may experience m...
The population served by early interventionists has changed to include more migrant families. Althou...
P(論文)This study examined the significance of family support for children with disabilities. The cont...
There is a strong research evidence showing the crucial role of social support networks in defining ...
We interviewed 200 Latino parents (50 Mexican couples, 50 Puerto Rican couples) living in the United...
Objective: to understand and identify the support network and social support from the perspective of...
This is a study of the ways in which Puerto Rican women cope with the financial and parental stress ...
This study seeks to identify the formation of social support networks of people with physical disabi...
In the last decades, there has been a steady increase in single parent families (Cheeseman, Ferguson...
This is a descriptive study of the statistical association between the amounts of financial—emotiona...
Family is the fi rst and most important social network for each person. The phenomenon of a disabili...