Parental conceptions about child emotional development

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Abstract

Mothers' and fathers' conceptualizations of joy, sadness, anger, fear, pride and shame were assessed. Their beliefs regarding the importance of children's manifestation of those emotions and the connection with the profiles of autonomy, relatedness and related-autonomy were also assessed. Sixty mother-father dyads with children up to three years old participated in the study. Questionnaires of parents' conceptualizations of emotions were used. Most participants considered joy an important emotion to be manifested by children of their kids' age (with an individual character motivation). However, anger, pride and shame were associated with older children. Mothers' and fathers' conceptualizations and beliefs were not divergent. The autonomous-related self model correlated positively with the importance mothers and parents attributed to all studied emotions.

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Mendes, D. M. L. F., & de Oliveira Ramos, D. (2020). Parental conceptions about child emotional development. Psicologia: Teoria e Pesquisa, 36. https://doi.org/10.1590/0102.3772E3634

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