Publication | Closed Access
Attachment and behavior problems in middle childhood as reported by adult and child informants
135
Citations
110
References
2006
Year
Family MedicineFamily InvolvementEducationMental HealthPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyChild InformantsFamily InteractionChildren ChildrenCognitive DevelopmentHuman DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentBehavioural ProblemBehavior ProblemsChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesEarly Childhood DevelopmentDominic QuestionnaireAttachment TheoryChild DevelopmentSecure ChildrenParentingMiddle ChildhoodMedicine
The predictive relation between attachment and mother, teacher, and self-reported psychopathology was examined for a diverse socioeconomic status French Canadian sample of 96 children. Attachment classifications were assigned on the basis of reunion behavior with mother when the children were approximately 6 years old, and child problem behavior was assessed 2 years later using the Child Behavior Checklist (mother report), the Social Behavior Questionaire (teacher report), and the Dominic Questionnaire (child self-report). Results indicated that both insecure/ambivalent and insecure/controlling children children were rated higher than secure children on a composite measure of externalizing problems. Concerning internalizing problems, only the controlling group was significantly higher on both a composite adult (teacher and mother) and self-report measure of internalizing problems. Analyses of clinical cutoff scores showed that only the controlling group had a significantly greater likelihood of overall problem behavior than other children.
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