Author:
MCHALE JAMES P.,RASMUSSEN JEFFREY L.
Abstract
This study examines longitudinal correlates of coparental and family group-level dynamics
during infancy. Thirty-seven couples observed at play with their 8–11-month-old infants
(15 boys, 22 girls) rated their child's internalizing and externalizing symptoms, and their
own coparenting behavior 3 years later. Teachers also rated child behavior at the 3-year
follow-up. Several significant relationships emerged between observed family process (high
hostility–competitiveness, low family harmony, and high parenting discrepancies in the
triad) at Time 1, and subsequent reports of child and coparenting behavior at Time 2. Larger
parenting discrepancies at Time 1 predicted greater child anxiety as rated by teachers; greater
hostility–competitiveness and lower harmony forecast higher child aggression. Time 1
family process continued to predict Time 2 aggression even after controlling for individual and
marital functioning. Several links were also found between distressed family process and later
parental reports of negative coparenting behavior. These parental reports of coparenting also
explained unique variance in concurrent child behavior ratings. The significance of coparenting
as a distinct family construct is discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
284 articles.
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