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  4. Assessing a culturally informed transactional model of Latino children's temperament development
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Assessing a culturally informed transactional model of Latino children's temperament development

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Description

The goal of this study is to contribute to the understanding of Mexican-American three- to five-year-old children’s effortful control (EC) and negative emotionality (NE) development by examining whether Mexican-American adolescent mothers’ parenting transacts with their three- to five-year-old children’s EC and NE and by exploring whether mothers’ familism acts as a protective factor. I hypothesized that mothers’ harshness and warmth would transact with EC and NE over time. I further hypothesized that mothers’ familism values would (a) positively predict mothers’ warmth and negatively predict mothers’ harshness, and (b) act as a buffer between low EC and high NE, and high harshness and low warmth. These hypotheses were tested within a sample of Mexican-American adolescent mother-child dyads (N = 204) and assessed longitudinally when children were 36, 48, and 60 months. Mothers were predominantly first generation (i.e., mothers’ parents were born in Mexico; 67%) and spoke English (65%). When children were 36 months, average family income (i.e., wages, public assistance, food stamps) was $24,715 (SD = $19,545) and mothers had started community college (13%) or completed high school/GED (30%), 11th grade (19%), 10th grade (8%), or less than 9th grade (14%). In this sample, transactions between harshness or warmth and EC or NE were not found, but a bidirectional association between NE and harshness was found. Familism marginally negatively predicted harshness, but not warmth. Familism moderated the relation between NE and harshness such that there was only a negative relation between NE and harshness when familism was high. However, familism did not moderate the relations between NE and warmth, or EC and harshness or warmth. The results of this study are discussed with respect to (a) current methodological limitations in the field, such as the need to test or develop parent-report measures of Mexican-American children’s temperament and value-driven socialization goals, (b) future avenues for research, such as person-centered studies of clusters of mothers’ values and how those relate to clusters of parenting behaviors, and (c) implications for interventions addressing parenting behavior of adolescent mothers.

Date Created
2018
Contributors
  • Berger, Rebecca H (Author)
  • Wilkens, Natalie (Thesis advisor)
  • Spinrad, Tracy (Committee member)
  • Updegraff, Kimberly (Committee member)
  • Crnic, Keith (Committee member)
  • Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
  • Individual & Family Studies
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Adolescent Mother
  • Culture
  • Mexican-American
  • parenting
  • Preschool
  • Temperament
  • Mexican American mothers
  • Mother and child
  • Preschool children
  • Mexican American children--Psychology.
  • Mexican American children
Resource Type
Text
Genre
Doctoral Dissertation
Academic theses
Extent
220 pages : tables
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Reuse Permissions
All Rights Reserved
Primary Member of
ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.49375
Statement of Responsibility
by Rebecca H. Berger
Description Source
Viewed on October 28, 2020
Level of coding
full
Note
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2018
Note type
thesis
Includes bibliographical references (pages 140-160)
Note type
bibliography
Field of study: Family and Human Development
System Created
  • 2018-06-01 08:11:11
System Modified
  • 2021-08-26 09:47:01
  •     
  • 1 year 7 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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