Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction

This qualitative study explored the interaction within a mother-father dyad regardi g child discipline of their preschool child in terms of: (a) their perceived discipline roles, (b) the socialization of parenting discipline style, (c) communication patterns regarding discipline, and (d) discipline...

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Main Author: Vielhaber, Donna Marie
Format: Others
Language:en
en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2293
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.anitoba.ca-dspace#1993-22932013-01-11T13:30:06ZVielhaber, Donna Marie2007-06-01T19:20:09Z2007-06-01T19:20:09Z1999-12-01T00:00:00Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/2293This qualitative study explored the interaction within a mother-father dyad regardi g child discipline of their preschool child in terms of: (a) their perceived discipline roles, (b) the socialization of parenting discipline style, (c) communication patterns regarding discipline, and (d) discipline problem solving and decision processes. A focused-ethnographic design was used to guide the research process. A purposive sample of 8 mother-father dyads, recruited from daycare, nursery school, and parent support group settings, participated in the study. The conceptual framework guiding this study is family interaction theory within the context of family developmental theory. Data analysis included content analysis of the interview transcripts and field notes to identify categories and themes. Data analysis revealed three themes: Learning About Discipline Takes a Life Time; Discipline: So What About It? and parents: The Discipline Team. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)16683224 bytes184 bytesapplication/pdftext/plainenen_USDisciplining preschool children, parent interactionNursingM.N.
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language en
en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
description This qualitative study explored the interaction within a mother-father dyad regardi g child discipline of their preschool child in terms of: (a) their perceived discipline roles, (b) the socialization of parenting discipline style, (c) communication patterns regarding discipline, and (d) discipline problem solving and decision processes. A focused-ethnographic design was used to guide the research process. A purposive sample of 8 mother-father dyads, recruited from daycare, nursery school, and parent support group settings, participated in the study. The conceptual framework guiding this study is family interaction theory within the context of family developmental theory. Data analysis included content analysis of the interview transcripts and field notes to identify categories and themes. Data analysis revealed three themes: Learning About Discipline Takes a Life Time; Discipline: So What About It? and parents: The Discipline Team. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
author Vielhaber, Donna Marie
spellingShingle Vielhaber, Donna Marie
Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
author_facet Vielhaber, Donna Marie
author_sort Vielhaber, Donna Marie
title Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
title_short Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
title_full Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
title_fullStr Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
title_full_unstemmed Disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
title_sort disciplining preschool children, parent interaction
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2293
work_keys_str_mv AT vielhaberdonnamarie discipliningpreschoolchildrenparentinteraction
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