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Showing 1 to 15 of 208 results Save | Export
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Barbara Mirkovic; Bernadine Brady; Charlotte Silke – Child Care in Practice, 2024
While the role parents play in supporting young people is well established, support from other caring adults also becomes important during adolescence, particularly when young people are facing problems in their lives. The goal of this paper is to reflect on youth support seeking when facing problems, exploring differences between youth who seek…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Late Adolescents, Youth Problems, Helping Relationship
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Reschke, Peter J.; Fraser, Ashley M.; Picket, Janna; Workman, Katey; Lehnardt, Hans; Stockdale, Laura A.; Padilla-Walker, Laura M.; Cox, Kylin; Holmgren, Hailey G.; Hagen, Sophie; Summers, Kjersti; Clifford, Brandon N.; Essig, Liam W.; Coyne, Sarah M. – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Infants can help and share in the second year of life. However, there is limited knowledge as to variability in these behaviors as a function of target (e.g., caregiver vs. unfamiliar adult) and the influence of caregiver support on infant prosocial behavior. Infants (N = 268, 124 female) at 1-2 years of age (M = 1.47, SD = 0.27) and again at 2-3…
Descriptors: Infants, Toddlers, Helping Relationship, Sharing Behavior
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Rui Yang; Theodore E. A. Waters; Yufei Gu; Niobe Way; Hirokazu Yoshikawa; Xinyin Chen; Guangzhen Zhang; Huihua Deng – Developmental Psychology, 2024
A growing body of literature shows that adherence to some aspects of Western masculinity norms, including the suppression of emotional vulnerability, avoidance of seeking support from others, and exaggerated physical toughness, is associated with poorer psychological and social outcomes. While existing research suggests that parental gender…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies, Urban Areas, Masculinity
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Tyia Wilson; Maxine Fenner; Alexander Riley; Alison J. Culyba – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2025
Using dyadic youth-adult interviews, the current study explored characteristics, benefits, and challenges of supportive youth-adult relationships for youths living in neighborhoods with high levels of community violence. Thirty-two dyads of youths between the ages 13 to 21 years (63% female, 88% Black) and their self-identified key adult supports…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Violence, African Americans, Minority Group Children
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Donohue, Meghan Rose; Williamson, Rebecca A.; Tully, Erin C. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2020
Prosocial behavior is a highly heterogeneous construct, and young children use distinct prosocial actions in response to differing emotional needs of another person. This study examined whether toddlers' prosocial responses differed in response to two understudied emotional contexts--whether or not children caused a victim's distress and the…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Prosocial Behavior, Psychological Needs, Emotional Disturbances
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Oh, Jeewon; Chopik, William J.; Nuttall, Amy K. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2020
Previous research has offered mixed evidence on whether obligation in relationships benefits or harms individuals and their relationships. Given that few studies are prospective and consider multiple close relationships, we used 18-year longitudinal data to model whether obligation is associated with differences in relational and individual…
Descriptors: Responsibility, Well Being, Correlation, Adults
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Thompson, David E.; Baptist, Joyce; Miller, Bryant; Henry, Una – Youth & Society, 2017
This qualitative study explored how 24 youths' behaviors during deployment were influenced by their perceptions of their non-deployed parents. Interviews were conducted with youths of previously deployed National Guard parents. Analysis of interviews suggests that the youths' interactions with their non-deployed parents strongly influence their…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Parents, Military Personnel, Interviews
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Holliday, Carol; Peacock, Fiona; Lewoski, Clair – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2018
Tutors of a child and adolescent psychotherapeutic counselling programme undertook a thematic analysis of five student assignments, from the same student cohort, designed to investigate their motives for undertaking the course. The assignments were thematically analysed utilising ideas derived from consensual qualitative research and narrative…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Psychotherapy, Assignments, Children
Abraham, Chacko – ProQuest LLC, 2017
The purpose of this qualitative research was to explore how self-identified academically successful students perceived their nonresident African American fathers' involvement in their education and to determine ways to encourage paternal participation in schools. Joyce Epstein's Six Types of Parental Involvement Typology was used to assess how the…
Descriptors: African Americans, African American Students, Fathers, Parent Participation
St. John, Maria Seymour – ZERO TO THREE, 2016
This article weaves the stories of three practitioner-family relationships and describes how the Parent-Child Relationship Competencies (PCRCs; St. John, 2010) function as a map for assessment and treatment planning. The PCRCs are a set of culturally variable yet universal bi-directional (parent-to-child and child-to-parent) relational capacities…
Descriptors: Competence, Parent Child Relationship, Infants, Parents
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Freeman, Stephanny F.; Gulsrud, Amanda; Kasari, Connie – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2015
This study examined the influence of early joint attention and play in children with autism on child- and parent-reported friendship quality 5 years later. Initially, children participated in developmental, joint attention, and play measures. At follow-up (age 8-9), parents and children completed the Friendship Qualities Scale (Bukowski et al. in…
Descriptors: Attention, Autism, Parent Child Relationship, Friendship
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Warneken, Felix; Tomasello, Michael – Infancy, 2013
Young children begin helping others with simple instrumental problems from soon after their first birthdays. In previous observations of this phenomenon, both naturalistic and experimental, children's parents were in the room and could potentially have influenced their behavior. In the two current studies, we gave 24-month-old children the…
Descriptors: Parent Influence, Toddlers, Helping Relationship, Prosocial Behavior
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Murray, Lynne; De Pascalis, Leonardo; Tomlinson, Mark; Vally, Zahir; Dadomo, Harold; MacLachlan, Brenda; Woodward, Charlotte; Cooper, Peter J. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2016
Background: Consistent with evidence from high-income countries (HICs), we previously showed that, in an informal peri-urban settlement in a low-middle income country, training parents in book sharing with their infants benefitted infant language and attention (Vally, Murray, Tomlinson, & Cooper, [Vally, Z., 2015]). Here, we investigated…
Descriptors: Randomized Controlled Trials, Foreign Countries, Low Income Groups, Parent Education
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Alfaro, Edna C.; Umaña-Taylor, Adriana J. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2015
This study examined whether longitudinal trajectories of academic support from mothers, fathers, and teachers predicted trajectories of Latino adolescents' (N = 323) academic motivation. Findings indicated those boys' perceptions of mothers' and fathers' academic support and girls' perceptions of mothers' academic support declined throughout high…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Hispanic American Students, Student Motivation, Prediction
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Leopold, Thomas; Raab, Marcel – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
Long-term concepts of parent-child reciprocity assume that the amount of support given and received is only balanced in a generalized fashion over the life course. We argue that reciprocity in parent-child relationships also operates in the short term. Our analysis of short-term reciprocity focuses on concurrent exchange in its main upward and…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Helping Relationship, Models, Family (Sociological Unit)
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