Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
This thesis examined the possibility of meaningful associations between children's attachment styles in middle childhood and children's perceptions of the parent. Participants were 199 students (94 males, 105 females) in grades three through eight (mean age = 11.03 years) from a Florida university school. The children were administered self-report measures and peer-report nomination measures. Five attachment coping strategies (preoccupied, indecisive, avoidant, coercive, and caregiving) and four aspects of perceived maternal behavior (reliable support, overprotection, harassment, and fear induction) were assessed and numerous and meaningful associations were found. For example, perceived maternal overprotection was positively associated with preoccupied coping. Significant associations were also found between our avoidant, coercive, indecisive, and caregiving coping measures and perceived maternal reliable support, harassment, and fear induction. Our numerous and significant findings lend further support for the usefulness and value of our concurrent correlational self-report measures and to justify future longitudinal research to compare alternative models.
Note
Charles E. Schmidt College of Science
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing1508", creator="staff:fcllz", creation_date="2007-07-18 22:39:37", modified_by="staff:fcllz", modification_date="2011-01-06 13:08:55"
Person Preferred Name
Kabbas, Diane R.
Graduate College
Title Plain
Does children's attachment style influence children's perception of the parent?
Use and Reproduction
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Physical Location
Florida Atlantic University Libraries
Title
Does children's attachment style influence children's perception of the parent?
Other Title Info
Does children's attachment style influence children's perception of the parent?