Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies

abstract: Although it has been established that children raised by lesbian and gay (LG) parents are comparable in psychological adjustment to those raised by heterosexuals, there are unique stressors that these families must face as members of a social minority group. For example, chronic exposure t...

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Other Authors: Kellison, Joshua G (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18144
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-181442018-06-22T03:04:13Z Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies abstract: Although it has been established that children raised by lesbian and gay (LG) parents are comparable in psychological adjustment to those raised by heterosexuals, there are unique stressors that these families must face as members of a social minority group. For example, chronic exposure to stigma and discrimination has been associated with several poor psychological and behavioral outcomes in children, as well as high levels of stress experienced by LG parents. Thus, the current study sought to examine LG parents' coping actions and parenting strategies as used during and after an act of antigay discrimination which also involved their children, or as these involved an act which their children witnessed. This study also sought to define the parenting needs of LG parents. The research plan utilized an integrative mixed methods approach to examine the qualitative text narratives of 43 LG parents (29 mothers and 14 fathers) ranging in age from 28-56 years old with school-aged children (6-12 years). Results revealed that LG parents' negative emotion-based coping actions predicted higher depressive symptoms (&beta;= .41,t(33) = 3.17, p < .01), LG parents' avoidant/escape coping actions predicted lower parenting self-agency (&beta; = -.34, t(33) = -2.23, p < .05), and LG parents' engagement in understanding and coping with discrimination parenting strategies predicted lower post-traumatic stress problems in their children (&beta; = -.33, t(33) = -1.96, yp = .059). Last, a family needs assessment survey was used to determine the unique parenting needs of these LG parents. The results of this survey indicated that LG parents endorsed the following three topic areas as most important to them: (a) LG Family Community Services, (b) Information about Child Development, and (c) Explaining LG Family to Others. These findings reinforce existing knowledge in terms of the effects of discrimination on LG parents and their children. Indeed, results indicate the importance of providing LG parents with adaptive discrimination coping and parenting strategies, as well as offering valuable information concerning their specific needs. Dissertation/Thesis Kellison, Joshua G (Author) Gonzalez Castro, Felipe (Advisor) Crnic, Keith (Advisor) Barrera, Jr., Manuel (Committee member) Marsiglia, Flavio (Committee member) Wolchik, Sharlene (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Clinical psychology eng 186 pages Ph.D. Psychology 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18144 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Clinical psychology
spellingShingle Clinical psychology
Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies
description abstract: Although it has been established that children raised by lesbian and gay (LG) parents are comparable in psychological adjustment to those raised by heterosexuals, there are unique stressors that these families must face as members of a social minority group. For example, chronic exposure to stigma and discrimination has been associated with several poor psychological and behavioral outcomes in children, as well as high levels of stress experienced by LG parents. Thus, the current study sought to examine LG parents' coping actions and parenting strategies as used during and after an act of antigay discrimination which also involved their children, or as these involved an act which their children witnessed. This study also sought to define the parenting needs of LG parents. The research plan utilized an integrative mixed methods approach to examine the qualitative text narratives of 43 LG parents (29 mothers and 14 fathers) ranging in age from 28-56 years old with school-aged children (6-12 years). Results revealed that LG parents' negative emotion-based coping actions predicted higher depressive symptoms (&beta;= .41,t(33) = 3.17, p < .01), LG parents' avoidant/escape coping actions predicted lower parenting self-agency (&beta; = -.34, t(33) = -2.23, p < .05), and LG parents' engagement in understanding and coping with discrimination parenting strategies predicted lower post-traumatic stress problems in their children (&beta; = -.33, t(33) = -1.96, yp = .059). Last, a family needs assessment survey was used to determine the unique parenting needs of these LG parents. The results of this survey indicated that LG parents endorsed the following three topic areas as most important to them: (a) LG Family Community Services, (b) Information about Child Development, and (c) Explaining LG Family to Others. These findings reinforce existing knowledge in terms of the effects of discrimination on LG parents and their children. Indeed, results indicate the importance of providing LG parents with adaptive discrimination coping and parenting strategies, as well as offering valuable information concerning their specific needs. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Psychology 2014
author2 Kellison, Joshua G (Author)
author_facet Kellison, Joshua G (Author)
title Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies
title_short Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies
title_full Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies
title_fullStr Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Lesbian and Gay Parenting: A Parental Needs Assessment and a Mixed-Methods Analysis of Discrimination Parenting and Coping Strategies
title_sort lesbian and gay parenting: a parental needs assessment and a mixed-methods analysis of discrimination parenting and coping strategies
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18144
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