Attunement between Parents and Professional Caregivers: A Comparison of Childrearing Attitudes in Different Child-Care Settings

In a survey of a national sample (n = 568 children) of parents and nonparental caregivers from four types of child care—day care, after-school care, family day care, and babysitter care—we studied the attunement of childrearing attitudes between parents and nonparental caregivers and perceptions of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of marriage and family 1998-08, Vol.60 (3), p.771-781
Hauptverfasser: van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H., Louis W. C. Tavecchio, Stams, Geert-Jan, Verhoeven, Mieke, Reiling, Erna
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container_end_page 781
container_issue 3
container_start_page 771
container_title Journal of marriage and family
container_volume 60
creator van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H.
Louis W. C. Tavecchio
Stams, Geert-Jan
Verhoeven, Mieke
Reiling, Erna
description In a survey of a national sample (n = 568 children) of parents and nonparental caregivers from four types of child care—day care, after-school care, family day care, and babysitter care—we studied the attunement of childrearing attitudes between parents and nonparental caregivers and perceptions of their relationships to one another and to the child from an ecological systems perspective. Parents within the same family were rather consistent in their childrearing attitudes and beliefs, but we found some discontinuities between parents and professional caregivers in their childrearing attitudes and perceptions of the quality of the child-caregiver relationship. Lack of attunement in authoritarian control and support was associated with a lower degree of child well-being. Better communication between parents and caregivers was associated with greater attunement and with a higher degree of child well-being.
doi_str_mv 10.2307/353545
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Parents within the same family were rather consistent in their childrearing attitudes and beliefs, but we found some discontinuities between parents and professional caregivers in their childrearing attitudes and perceptions of the quality of the child-caregiver relationship. Lack of attunement in authoritarian control and support was associated with a lower degree of child well-being. Better communication between parents and caregivers was associated with greater attunement and with a higher degree of child well-being.</abstract><cop>Malden</cop><pub>National Council on Family Relations</pub><doi>10.2307/353545</doi><tpages>11</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Attitudes
Authoritarianism
Caregiver Child Relationship
Caregivers
Child care
Child Care Centers
Child Care Services
Child Caregivers
Child Development
Child Rearing
Child Welfare
Child. Socialization
Childrearing Practices
Children
Day care
Day care centers
Interpersonal Communication
Mothers
Of General Interest
Parent Attitudes
Parent Child Relations
Parent Child Relationship
Parental Attitudes
Parents
Parents & parenting
Perceptions
Social research
Sociology
Sociology of the family. Age groups
Well Being
Wellbeing
title Attunement between Parents and Professional Caregivers: A Comparison of Childrearing Attitudes in Different Child-Care Settings
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