Publication | Closed Access
Mother-Child Interaction as a Predictor of Mastery Motivation in Children with Disabilities Born Preterm
28
Citations
27
References
2006
Year
Disabilities Born PretermChild PsychologyDevelopmental DisabilityEarly Childhood DevelopmentMotivationPediatricsEducationCognitive DevelopmentSpecial EducationSocial SciencesYoung ChildrenMastery MotivationDevelopmental DisorderGlobal Developmental DelayMother-child InteractionPsychologyChild DevelopmentDevelopmental Psychology
This study examined mother-child interaction as a predictor of mastery motivation (i.e., persistence on a problem-posing task) in 3-year-old children who were born premature and had either motor impairment or developmental delay (n = 34). Two aspects of mother-child interaction were hypothesized to predict for mastery motivation: response to child's distress and cognitive growth-fostering behaviors. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that maternal response to distress, but not cognitive growth promotion, added significant unique variance (15.3%) beyond child cognitive performance in the prediction of mastery motivation. Results suggest that interventions focused on emotional aspects of the mother-child dyad provide important benefits to young children with disabilities who are born preterm.
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