Contains fulltext : 234101.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Objective. Parental support, stimulation, positive discipline, and structure are all important for social-emotional adjustment of toddlers and preschoolers. However, less is known about the relative importance of these positive parenting practices. The current cross-sectional study examines the associations between positive parenting practices and child social-emotional difficulties in relation to child age and parental gender. Design. 446 Dutch families (446 mothers, Mage = 33.51 years; 446 fathers, Mage = 35.63 years) rearing a child (46.9% boys) between 17 and 48 months of age (Mage = 31.64) participated. Parents reported on their own positive parenting ...
Contains fulltext : 155464.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A 15-item que...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
The goal of this study is to examine associations among family and child protective factors, materna...
SYNOPSIS: Objective. Parental support, stimulation, positive discipline, and structure are all impor...
Parenting has been shown to play a crucial role in the development of child emotional and behavior p...
Mother-father relationships are one of the most important contexts for children's social-emotio...
Empirical evidence links sensitive parenting behavior to positive developmental trajectories in chil...
Objective: Parental Self-efficacy (PSE) has been positively linked to the adaptability and sociality...
Grounded in a conceptual model of family processes underlying socioemotional development and a conte...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
Research suggests that ineffective parenting practices play a central role in the development of chi...
Using dyadic data (couple N =1,423) from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (at child ag...
Aim: The aim of the present study was to examine the relation between parenting behavior of fathers ...
Previous research reported that positive parenting and parenting stress might impact children’s psyc...
Grounded in a conceptual model of family processes underlying socioemotional development and a conte...
Contains fulltext : 155464.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A 15-item que...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
The goal of this study is to examine associations among family and child protective factors, materna...
SYNOPSIS: Objective. Parental support, stimulation, positive discipline, and structure are all impor...
Parenting has been shown to play a crucial role in the development of child emotional and behavior p...
Mother-father relationships are one of the most important contexts for children's social-emotio...
Empirical evidence links sensitive parenting behavior to positive developmental trajectories in chil...
Objective: Parental Self-efficacy (PSE) has been positively linked to the adaptability and sociality...
Grounded in a conceptual model of family processes underlying socioemotional development and a conte...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
Research suggests that ineffective parenting practices play a central role in the development of chi...
Using dyadic data (couple N =1,423) from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (at child ag...
Aim: The aim of the present study was to examine the relation between parenting behavior of fathers ...
Previous research reported that positive parenting and parenting stress might impact children’s psyc...
Grounded in a conceptual model of family processes underlying socioemotional development and a conte...
Contains fulltext : 155464.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A 15-item que...
Objective: This study examined four types of stability (factorial equivalence over time, mean-level ...
The goal of this study is to examine associations among family and child protective factors, materna...