This study was intended to examine the relationship among children's emotionality, parental meta-emotion, and parent-child attachment. The sample consisted of 546 5th and 6th grade children and their mothers. The test instruments used in this study were the Emotionality subscale of the EAS Temperament Survey (mothers' ratings only), the Parental Meta-Emotion Survey (mothers' ratings only) and the Attachment Security Scale (children's ratings only). Our results showed that maternal meta-emotion (emotion coaching plus emotion dismissing) was associated with children's attachment security vis-A -vis their mothers. Mothers who tended to adopt an emotion-coaching philosophy were more likely to achieve secure parent-child attachments, as reported by their children. Children whose mothers tended to adopt an emotion-dismissing philosophy reported lower levels of attachment security. There were no direct or indirect effects of children's emotionality on their attachment security. Parental meta-emotion, but not children's emotionality, was significantly associated with children's attachment security. The results indicate the importance of parenting factors in determining the parent-child relationship. Parental education programs that focus on parental attitudes and practices related to emotion should be advocated.
The Role of Emotion in Parent-Child Relationships: Children's Emotionality, Maternal Meta-Emotion, and Children's Attachment Security
Literatuur
Auteur(s)
Chen, FM; Lin, HS; Li, CH
Jaar
2012
Bron
Journal Of Child And Family Studies 21 (3): 403-410 Jun 2012