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Journal Article

Citation

Hart CH, Ladd GW, Burleson BR. Child Dev. 1990; 61(1): 127-137.

Affiliation

Department of Family, Child, and Consumer Sciences, School Human Ecology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge 70803.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1990, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2307034

Abstract

To explore relations between maternal disciplinary styles, children's expectations of the outcomes of social strategies, and children's peer status, 144 mothers and their first- (N = 59) and fourth- (N = 85) grade children (ages = 70-86 months and 116-129 months, respectively) participated in home interviews prior to the beginning of the school year. Measures of children's sociometric status were obtained in classrooms after the school year began. Results indicated that children of mothers who were more power assertive in their disciplinary styles tended to be less accepted by peers and tended to expect successful outcomes for unfriendly-assertive methods for resolving peer conflict (e.g., threatening to hit another child). In addition, children who expected unfriendly-assertive strategies to lead to self-oriented gains were less accepted by peers. Moreover, maternal disciplinary styles and outcome expectations for unfriendly-assertive strategies were found to make separate and independent contribution to peer status.


Language: en

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