The relations of parental emotional expressivity with quality of Indonesian children's social functioning. |
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Authors: | Eisenberg, Nancy Liew, Jeffrey Pidada, Sri Untari |
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Abstract: | In Western societies, parental expression of positive emotion has been positively related to the quality of children's social functioning, whereas their expression of negative emotion has been negatively or inconsistently related. The relations of parental expressivity to 3rd-grade Indonesian children's dispositional regulation, socially appropriate behavior, popularity, and sympathy were examined. Parents, teachers, and peers reported on children's social functioning and regulation, and parents (mostly mothers) reported on their own expression of emotion in the family. Generally, parental expression of negative emotion was negatively related to the quality of children's social functioning, and regression analyses indicated that the relations of parental negative expressivity to children's popularity and externalizing behaviors might be indirect through their effects on children's regulation. Unexpectedly, parental expression of positive emotion was unrelated to children's social functioning. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | parental emotional expressivity child social functioning disposition social behavior popularity sympathy Indonesia |
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