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Donker, Monika H.; Mastrotheodoros, Stefanos; Branje, Susan – Developmental Psychology, 2021
The extensive measures to prevent spread of COVID-19 have had a major impact on families' daily lives. Changes in family routines and experiences of COVID-19-related stress might negatively impact the quality of parenting and the parent-adolescent relationship. However, using active coping strategies might be associated with limited negative or…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, COVID-19, Pandemics, Anxiety
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Santiago, Catherine DeCarlo; Jolie, Sarah A.; Bustos, Yvita; Distel, Laura M. L. – Developmental Psychology, 2021
Family is an important context for the development of adaptive child coping. Further, both family and child coping can promote positive mental health. This study examines whether family coping predicts child coping over 1 year among Mexican-origin immigrant families. Participants included 104 families with a child aged 6-10 years (M[subscript age]…
Descriptors: Coping, Child Development, Mental Health, Family Environment
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Lee, Daniel B.; Anderson, Riana E.; Hope, Meredith O.; Zimmerman, Marc A. – Developmental Psychology, 2020
Perceived racial discrimination (PRD) has been documented as a risk factor for worse psychological well-being among African Americans. Yet, most researchers have not examined how trajectories of PRD during emerging adulthood shape psychological well-being in adulthood. Moreover, less is known about whether demographic factors and components of…
Descriptors: Racial Discrimination, Predictor Variables, Well Being, Mental Health
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Johnson, Matthew D.; Horne, Rebecca M.; Galovan, Adam M. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
Drawing from a relational developmental systems (RDS) perspective (Lerner, Agans, DeSouza, & Gasca, 2013) and data from 1,427 continuously partnered young adult and midlife mixed-sex couples over the first 5 years of the German Panel Analysis of Intimate Relationships and Family Dynamics (pairfam), this study examined the developmental course…
Descriptors: Adults, Coping, Stress Management, Marriage
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Davies, Patrick T.; Coe, Jesse L.; Martin, Meredith J.; Sturge-Apple, Melissa L.; Cummings, E. Mark – Developmental Psychology, 2015
Building on empirical documentation of children's involvement in interparental conflicts as a weak predictor of psychopathology, we tested the hypothesis that involvement in conflict more consistently serves as a moderator of associations between children's emotional reactivity to interparental conflict and their psychological problems. In Study…
Descriptors: Parents, Interpersonal Relationship, Psychopathology, Hypothesis Testing
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Abaied, Jamie L.; Rudolph, Karen D. – Developmental Psychology, 2011
Understanding how youths develop particular styles of responding to stress is critical for promoting effective coping. This research examined the prospective, interactive contribution of maternal socialization of coping and peer stress to youth responses to peer stress. A sample of 144 early adolescents (mean age = 12.44 years, SD = 1.22) and…
Descriptors: Socialization, Caregivers, Questionnaires, Coping
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Jacobson, Joseph L; Wille, Diane E. – Developmental Psychology, 1984
Distress in response to brief maternal separations was examined in a sample of 93 predominantly home-reared infants using the Ainsworth strange situation paradigm. At 18 months, the age when separation protests begin to decline, securely attached infants are better able than anxiously attached infants to tolerate maternal separations. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Coping, Day Care, Early Childhood Education
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Hughes, Diane; Rodriguez, James; Smith, Emilie P.; Johnson, Deborah J.; Stevenson, Howard C.; Spicer, Paul – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Recently, there has been an emergence of literature on the mechanisms through which parents transmit information, values, and perspectives about ethnicity and race to their children, commonly referred to as racial or ethnic socialization. This literature has sought to document the nature of such socialization, its antecedents in parents' and…
Descriptors: Parent Influence, Socialization, Futures (of Society), Ethnicity
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Shoda, Yuichi; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1990
Delay times were measured under several conditions of self-imposed gratification delay for preschool children. The cognitive, self-regulatory, and coping competence of the children at adolescence was significantly predicted by delay times in the no-strategy condition with exposed rewards, but not in the suggested strategy condition. (BC)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cognitive Ability, Coping, Delay of Gratification