Publication | Closed Access
Maternal personality, parenting cognitions, and parenting practices.
176
Citations
86
References
2011
Year
Child PsychologyBehavioral SciencesPersonality PsychologyParental CareFamily InvolvementCognitive DevelopmentParentingMaternal HealthFamily PsychologyMaternal Personality5-Factor ModelSocial SciencesPersonality DevelopmentEducationPersonality InventoryPsychologyChild DevelopmentDevelopmental Psychology
A community sample of 262 European American mothers of firstborn 20-month-olds completed a personality inventory and measures of parenting cognitions (knowledge, self-perceptions, and reports about behavior) and was observed in interaction with their children from which measures of parenting practices (language, sensitivity, affection, and play) were independently coded. Factor analyses of the personality inventory replicated extraction of the 5-factor model of personality (Openness, Neuroticism, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness). When controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, the 5 personality factors qua variables and in patterns qua clusters related differently to diverse parenting cognitions and practices, supporting the multidimensional, modular, and specific nature of parenting. Maternal personality in the normal range, a theoretically important but empirically neglected factor in everyday parenting, has meaning in studies of parenting, child development, and family process.
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