Publication: Role of temperament, parenting behaviors, and stress on Turkish preschoolers’ internalizing symptoms
Files
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Yavuz, H. Melis
Corapçı, Feyza
Aksan, Nazan
Advisor
Publication Date
2017
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Child- and family-related factors that predict internalizing symptoms are under-studied in preschool years and have a negative influence on children’s functioning. We examined observational assessments of preschoolers’ temperamental fear fulness and exuberance, mother reports of negative control, warmth, and parenting stress in a sample of 109 Turkish preschoolers. High temperamental fearfulness and low joyful/exuberant positive affectivity in addition to low warmth and high parenting stress had significant effects on internalizing symptoms. Parenting stress had both direct and indirect relations to internalizing symptoms via lower maternal warmth. When comorbid elevations in externalizing symptoms were controlled, the results were consistent with the interpretation that poor parenting practices and stress associated with the parenting role predict maladaptation in general but that the specific form of maladaptation may be best predicted by individual differences in children’s temperament
Description
Source:
Social Development
Publisher:
Wiley
Keywords:
Subject
Psychology, Developmental psychology