Affiliation:
1. Psychology Department, University of Guelph
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Parents play an important role in keeping their children safe. However, this becomes more difficult during preadolescence as children seek greater autonomy away from the direct supervision of adults. The current study focused on preadolescent youth (10–13 years) and examined parent–child disagreements about safety, with a focus on determining if child temperament attributes moderate the relation between how parents learn of these and resolve these disagreements.
Methods
A short-term longitudinal design was used. Parents and children retrospectively recalled safety disagreements together and then independently completed questionnaires about these. Parents then tracked disagreements over 1 month.
Results
The behavioral attributes of inhibitory control and risk-taking propensity both moderated the relationships between parental source of knowledge of safety disagreements and subsequent methods of resolution.
Conclusion
Safety-promotion messaging for parents of preadolescents may need to be tailored based on child attributes to maximize effectiveness.
Funder
Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada
Canada Research Chair
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health