Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?

Objective: This study investigates how changes in parental relationship quality relate to children's socio-emotional development during early childhood and whether high-quality early childcare arrangements may act as a protective factor in children’s environments. Background: We draw on fam...

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Main Authors: Isabelle Fischer, Pia S. Schober, Benjamin Nagengast
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bamberg Press 2021-07-01
Series:Journal of Family Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/379
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spelling doaj-8e5a5e1c301b4dcd8b94b575458ef8382021-07-23T21:23:37ZengUniversity of Bamberg PressJournal of Family Research2699-23372021-07-0110.20377/jfr-379Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?Isabelle Fischer0Pia S. Schober1Benjamin Nagengast2University of TuebingenUniversity of TuebingenUniversity of Tuebingen Objective: This study investigates how changes in parental relationship quality relate to children's socio-emotional development during early childhood and whether high-quality early childcare arrangements may act as a protective factor in children’s environments. Background: We draw on family systems theory and the bioecological model of human development to conceptualise how different social environments may interact in their influences on children's socio-emotional development during early childhood and across the transition to primary school. Method: Based on a pooled sample of 636 US-American children who took part in the longitudinal NICHD Study of Early Childcare and Youth Development (SECCYD), we applied fixed-effects panel models to three time points between age 3 and first grade. Results: Whereas changes in parental relationships quality were not significant in predicting children's socio-emotional development from age 3 to 4.5 years, our results showed that a reduction in parental relationship quality was moderately associated with an increase in behaviour problems of children across the transition to first grade. We did not find any evidence of mitigating effects of the child-specific process quality of the ECEC arrangement, neither for informal nor formal care settings. Conclusion: The results suggest that initiatives designed to improve a couple’'s relationship quality might also be an effective way to further their children’s socio-emotional development. https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/379Socio-emotional developmentparental relationship qualityearly childhood education and careNICHD SECCYDUnited States
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabelle Fischer
Pia S. Schober
Benjamin Nagengast
spellingShingle Isabelle Fischer
Pia S. Schober
Benjamin Nagengast
Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?
Journal of Family Research
Socio-emotional development
parental relationship quality
early childhood education and care
NICHD SECCYD
United States
author_facet Isabelle Fischer
Pia S. Schober
Benjamin Nagengast
author_sort Isabelle Fischer
title Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?
title_short Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?
title_full Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?
title_fullStr Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?
title_full_unstemmed Parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: Childcare quality as a protective factor?
title_sort parental relationship quality and children's behavioural problems: childcare quality as a protective factor?
publisher University of Bamberg Press
series Journal of Family Research
issn 2699-2337
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Objective: This study investigates how changes in parental relationship quality relate to children's socio-emotional development during early childhood and whether high-quality early childcare arrangements may act as a protective factor in children’s environments. Background: We draw on family systems theory and the bioecological model of human development to conceptualise how different social environments may interact in their influences on children's socio-emotional development during early childhood and across the transition to primary school. Method: Based on a pooled sample of 636 US-American children who took part in the longitudinal NICHD Study of Early Childcare and Youth Development (SECCYD), we applied fixed-effects panel models to three time points between age 3 and first grade. Results: Whereas changes in parental relationships quality were not significant in predicting children's socio-emotional development from age 3 to 4.5 years, our results showed that a reduction in parental relationship quality was moderately associated with an increase in behaviour problems of children across the transition to first grade. We did not find any evidence of mitigating effects of the child-specific process quality of the ECEC arrangement, neither for informal nor formal care settings. Conclusion: The results suggest that initiatives designed to improve a couple’'s relationship quality might also be an effective way to further their children’s socio-emotional development.
topic Socio-emotional development
parental relationship quality
early childhood education and care
NICHD SECCYD
United States
url https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/379
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