Is the ideal mother a sensitive mother? Beliefs about early childhood parenting in mothers across the globe

In this paper we test the hypothesis that beliefs about the ideal mother are convergent across cultures and that these beliefs overlap considerably with attachment theory’s notion of the sensitive mother. In a sample including 26 cultural groups from 15 countries around the globe, 751 mothers sorted...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of behavioral development 2016-09, Vol.40 (5), p.385-397
Hauptverfasser: Mesman, Judi, Van IJzendoorn, Marinus, Behrens, Kazuko, Carbonell, Olga Alicia, Cárcamo, Rodrigo, Cohen-Paraira, Inbar, De la Harpe, Christian, Ekmekçi, Hatice, Emmen, Rosanneke, Soares, Isabel
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container_end_page 397
container_issue 5
container_start_page 385
container_title International journal of behavioral development
container_volume 40
creator Mesman, Judi
Van IJzendoorn, Marinus
Behrens, Kazuko
Carbonell, Olga Alicia
Cárcamo, Rodrigo
Cohen-Paraira, Inbar
De la Harpe, Christian
Ekmekçi, Hatice
Emmen, Rosanneke
Soares, Isabel
description In this paper we test the hypothesis that beliefs about the ideal mother are convergent across cultures and that these beliefs overlap considerably with attachment theory’s notion of the sensitive mother. In a sample including 26 cultural groups from 15 countries around the globe, 751 mothers sorted the Maternal Behavior Q-Set to reflect their ideas about the ideal mother. The results show strong convergence between maternal beliefs about the ideal mother and attachment theory’s description of the sensitive mother across groups. Cultural group membership significantly predicted variations in maternal sensitivity belief scores, but this effect was substantially accounted for by group variations in socio-demographic factors. Mothers living in rural versus urban areas, with a low family income, and with more children were less likely to describe the ideal mother as highly sensitive. Cultural group membership did remain a significant predictor of variations in maternal sensitivity belief scores above and beyond socio-demographic predictors. The findings are discussed in terms of the universal and culture-specific aspects of the sensitivity construct.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0165025415594030
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subjects Attachment Behavior
Beliefs
Child Behavior
Child Rearing
Ciências Sociais
Correlation
Cross Cultural Studies
Cultural Influences
Early Childhood Education
Ethnic Groups
Foreign Countries
Likert Scales
Maternal sensitivity
Mothers
Parent Child Relationship
Parenting Styles
Predictor Variables
Psicologia
Psychological Patterns
Questionnaires
Social Sciences
Socioeconomic Status
Statistical Analysis
Young Children
title Is the ideal mother a sensitive mother? Beliefs about early childhood parenting in mothers across the globe
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