Parent–child relationships and Chinese children's social adaptations: Gender difference in parent–child dyads

Based on data from 1,366 Chinese preschoolers aged 31–77 months from 62 preschools, this study compared differences among four parent–child dyads in parent–child relationships and the associations between parent–child relationships and children's social adaptations. According to the results, th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personal relationships 2018-12, Vol.25 (4), p.462-479
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Liangyuan, Liu, Lisha, Li, Yanfang, Liu, Lijun, Huntsinger, Carol S.
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container_end_page 479
container_issue 4
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container_title Personal relationships
container_volume 25
creator Xu, Liangyuan
Liu, Lisha
Li, Yanfang
Liu, Lijun
Huntsinger, Carol S.
description Based on data from 1,366 Chinese preschoolers aged 31–77 months from 62 preschools, this study compared differences among four parent–child dyads in parent–child relationships and the associations between parent–child relationships and children's social adaptations. According to the results, the same‐sex dyad and opposite‐sex dyad patterns were tested. The results showed the same‐sex dyad and opposite‐sex dyad patterns in parent–child closeness. Mother–daughter dyads had more closeness than mother–son dyads; father–daughter dyads had more closeness than father–son dyads. The results were more supportive of the same‐sex dyad pattern in the associations between parent–child relationships and social adaptations. Mother–child closeness predicted girls' greater social skills and fewer problem behaviors; father–child conflict predicted boys' worse social skills and greater problem behaviors.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/pere.12254
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subjects child gender
Children & youth
father–child relationship
mother–child relationship
social adaptation
Social skills
young Chinese children
title Parent–child relationships and Chinese children's social adaptations: Gender difference in parent–child dyads
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