Cognitive response repertoires to child noncompliance by mothers of aggressive boys
TP Beauchaine, Z Strassberg, MR Kees… - Journal of Abnormal …, 2002 - Springer
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2002•Springer
Cognitive response repertoires to videotaped child noncompliance episodes were
examined in mothers of aggressive (MAs) and nonaggressive 4–6-year-old boys. Mothers
provided open-ended solutions to three subtypes of child noncompliance under conditions
of time pressure, or after they waited for 15 s to consider alternatives. Solutions were coded
as assistance/facilitation, coercion, deference, or explanation/clarification. Compared with
controls, MAs offered fewer explanation/clarification responses, more coercive responses …
examined in mothers of aggressive (MAs) and nonaggressive 4–6-year-old boys. Mothers
provided open-ended solutions to three subtypes of child noncompliance under conditions
of time pressure, or after they waited for 15 s to consider alternatives. Solutions were coded
as assistance/facilitation, coercion, deference, or explanation/clarification. Compared with
controls, MAs offered fewer explanation/clarification responses, more coercive responses …
Abstract
Cognitive response repertoires to videotaped child noncompliance episodes were examined in mothers of aggressive (MAs) and nonaggressive 4–6-year-old boys. Mothers provided open-ended solutions to three subtypes of child noncompliance under conditions of time pressure, or after they waited for 15 s to consider alternatives. Solutions were coded as assistance/facilitation, coercion, deference, or explanation/clarification. Compared with controls, MAs offered fewer explanation/clarification responses, more coercive responses, and fewer unique solutions during pressured responding. Two to 6 weeks later, mothers were videotaped while participating with their sons in a challenging block-building task. Maternal responses to the vignettes predicted conflict escalation during block building, even after rates of concurrent and past child noncompliance were partialled out. Implications for parent-training models are considered.
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