Sentences with phrase «supportiveness from»

As outlined in the previous section, a substantial minority (16 %) of ten year - old children in GUS couple families perceive low levels of supportiveness from fathers, and are categorised as having a «poor» father - child relationship.
An additional 15 % perceive poor levels of supportiveness from only one parent, however this is more likely to be with the father (11 %) than with the mother (3 %).
This gender difference is reflected in other aspects of children's wellbeing: boys also perceive lower supportiveness from mothers, have higher levels of behavioural and emotional problems, and report lower wellbeing on other measures used in this study.
Boys report slightly lower supportiveness from fathers than girls.
In our study, the gap in perceived supportiveness from fathers and mothers was widest for families with a father figure.
Boys report slightly lower supportiveness from fathers than do girls.
While the majority of children perceive high levels of supportiveness from resident fathers, a significant minority perceiving low levels of supportiveness also have lower overall wellbeing, regardless of other family circumstances.
• The experience of a general lack of support, with the quality of the couple relationship, including disagreement about the pregnancy and perceived lack of supportiveness from the mother particularly central (Huang & Warner, 2005; Dudley et al, 2001; Matthey et al, 2000).

Not exact matches

[45] Findings from early studies on the familial origins of locus of control were summarized by Lefcourt: «Warmth, supportiveness and parental encouragement seem to be essential for development of an internal locus».
Supportiveness was measured using nine items from the trust and communication subscales of the People in My Life (PIML) scale, a self - report measure of child attachment designed and validated for use in middle childhood (6 - 12 years)(Ridenour, Greenberg & Cook, 2006) The validation process used a sample of 10 - 12 year olds to establish that the overall PIML attachment scale was correlated as expected with other measures of children's behavioural and emotional adjustment, as reported by parents, teachers and children themselves.
GUS did not collect information from fathers on supportiveness.
Results showed that work - family conflict resulting from husbands» and wives» employment is related positively to the psychological distress of each, and that psychological distress affects marital outcomes both directly and indirectly through its association with greater marital hostility and less marital warmth and supportiveness.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z