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Investigating the Relationship between Perceived Maternal Acceptance-Rejection and the Psychological Well-Being of African American Young Adults. and roles of African American Mothers…. MOTHERS REMAIN IN THE ROLE OF MAIN CAREGIVER. CO-PARENT. Caregiver + contributor to economy. Background:.
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Investigating the Relationship between Perceived Maternal Acceptance-Rejection and the Psychological Well-Being of African American Young Adults
and roles of African American Mothers… MOTHERS REMAIN IN THE ROLE OF MAIN CAREGIVER CO-PARENT Caregiver + contributor to economy Background: Historical Overview of AA Fatherhood… STERN PATRIARCH BREADWINNER FREEMEN’SBUREAU GENIAL PLAYMATE/ROLE MODEL SEX-ROLE MODEL CO-PARENT
Background: Importance of Topic: • Defines the specific contributions mothers have on a child’s psychological Well-Being • Promotes understanding of the impact that “non present” mothers have on child psychological Well-Being • Provides a new way to conceptualize a mother’s behavior in relation to children’s Well-Being. • Recognizes need to increase the number of studies on topic, on this population, and this age group
Theory: • PARTheory, personality subtheory which seeks to explain main causes and consequences of parental nurturance as children perceive their relationship with their parent • PARTheory looks at parental acceptance and rejection and how it affect children’s development, and follows them through adulthood. • Parental acceptance-rejection construct the warmth dimension of parenting Theoretical tools used: Rohner’s,1986
Study Aims: How does perceived maternal nurturance affect the psychological well-being of African Americans emerging into adulthood?
Hypothesis: • There is a positive correlation between perceived maternal acceptance and the psychological well-being of young adults. • As perceived maternal warmth increases, the young adult’s psychological well-being will increase.
The Results: Parental Acceptance Rejection Questionnaire (PARQ): Mean score, M=37.1,SD=12.93,n= 228 Findings: Students experienced significantly lower levels of maternal rejection and higher levels of acceptance during adolescence
The Results: Personality Assessment Questionnaire (PAQ): Mean score, M= 120.78 , SD= 25.80, n= 189 Findings: Indicate that this sample population experienced a moderate level of self-reported well- being.
The Results: Bi-variate correlation: The correlation proves to be moderate, indicating that there is a relationship between perceived maternal acceptance and the psychological well-being ** Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed).
Results: Scatter Gram: Provides a graphic view of relationship that exist between mother nurturance and psychological well-being
Discussion: Hypothesis • Moderate positive relationship Relationship to PARTheory: • Parental relationshipspredictor of child’s well-being (Rohner’s, 1986) Relationship to Theory: • Gecas & Schwalbe • Veneziano (2000) • Brynum and Kotchick, 2006
Discussion: Limitations • Generalizing results • Cross-sectional study • Sample of convenience • Not causal relationship • Ambiguity Future Research • Maternal nurturance at different developmental stages and gender differences.
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References • Gecas, V. and Schwalbe, M. L. (1986). Parental behavior and adolescent self-esteem. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 48(1), 37-46. • Ispa, J. M.; Fine, M. A.; Halgunseth, L. C.; and Harper, S. (2004). Maternal intrusiveness, maternal warmth, and Mother–Toddler relationship outcomes: Variations across low-income ethnic and acculturation groups. Child Development, 75(6), 1613-1631. • LaRossa, R. (1988). Fatherhood and social change. Family Relations, 37(4), 451-457. • McAdoo, J. L. (1993). The role of African American fathers: An ecological perspective. Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Human Services, 74, 28-35. • Ohannessian,C; Lerner R.;Lerner, J.; and Alexander, E. (1998). Perceived Parental Acceptance and Early Adolescent Self- Competence. American Journal of Onhopsychiatry, 68(4) • Rohner, R. P. and Veneziano, R. A. (2001). The importance of fatherly love: History and contemporary evidence. Review of General Psychology, 5(4), 382-405. • Rohner, R. P. (1986). PART's personality theory and its historical antecedents. The warmth dimension: Foundations of parental acceptance-rejection theory. (pp. 66-87). Beverly Hills: SAGE Publications, Inc. • Rohner, R. P., Khaleque, A. & & Cournoyer, D. E. ((N.D.)). Parental acceptance-rejection theory, methods, evidence, and implications. Retrieved 9-2-2007www.cepar.uconn.edu • Summers, J. A., Boller, K., Schiffman, R. F., and Raikes, H.H. (2006). The mmenaing of "good fatherhood:" low-income fathers' social constructions of their roles. Parenting: Science and Practice, 6(2), 145-165. Retrieved 9-5-2007 from JSTOR database. • Veneziano, R. A. (2000). Perceived paternal and maternal acceptance and rural African American and European American youths' psychological adjustment. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 62(1), 123-132.