Children’s perceptions of maternal hostility as a mediator of the link between discipline and children’s adjustment in four countries
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Publication Date
2010-09Author
Jennifer E Lansford, Patrick S Malone, Kenneth A Dodge, Lei Chang, Nandita Chaudhary, Sombat Tapanya, Paul Oburu, Kirby Deater-Deckard
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Using data from 195 dyads of mothers and children (age range ¼ 8–12 years; M ¼ 10.63) in four countries (China, India, the Philippines, and
Thailand), this study examined children’s perceptions of maternal hostility as a mediator of the links between physical discipline and harsh
verbal discipline and children’s adjustment. Both physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline had direct effects on mothers’ reports of
children’s anxiety and aggression; three of these four links were mediated by children’s perceptions of maternal hostility. In contrast,
there were no significant direct effects of physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline on children’s reports of their own anxiety and
aggression. Instead, both physical discipline and harsh verbal discipline had indirect effects on the outcomes through children’s
perceptions of maternal hostility. We identified a significant interaction between perceived normativeness and use of harsh verbal
discipline on children’s perception of maternal hostility, but children’s perception of the normativeness of physical discipline did not
moderate the relation between physical discipline and perceived maternal hostility. The effects of harsh verbal discipline were more
adverse when children perceived that form of discipline as being nonnormative than when children perceived that form of discipline as
being normative. Results are largely consistent with a theoretical model positing that the meaning children attach to parents’ discipline
strategies is important in understanding associations between discipline and children’s adjustment, and that cultural context is
associated with children’s interpretations of their parents’ behavior.
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- Department of Psychology [210]