Publication | Closed Access
Parenting knowledge: Experiential and sociodemographic factors in European American mothers of young children.
247
Citations
97
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineParental CareFamily InvolvementEducationPsychologyFamily StudiesSociodemographic FactorsFamily InteractionHuman DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceChild RearingEuropean American MothersChild Well-beingMaternal HealthParent LeadershipChild DevelopmentPediatricsParentingYoung ChildrenMedicine
Knowledge of child rearing and child development is relevant to parenting and the well-being of children. Using a sociodemographically heterogeneous sample of 268 European American mothers of 2-year-olds, we assessed the state of mothers' parenting knowledge; compared parenting knowledge in groups of mothers who varied in terms of parenthood and social status; and identified principal sources of mothers' parenting knowledge in terms of social factors, parenting supports, and formal classes. On the whole, European American mothers demonstrated fair but less than complete basic parenting knowledge; age, education, and rated helpfulness of written materials each uniquely contributed to mothers' knowledge. Adult mothers scored higher than adolescent mothers, and mothers improved in their knowledge of parenting from their first to their second child (and were stable across time). No differences were found between mothers of girls and boys, mothers who varied in employment status, or birth and adoptive mothers. The implications of variation in parenting knowledge and its sources for parenting education and clinical interactions with parents are discussed.
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