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The Relation Between Mothers' Attitudes Toward Maternal Employment and Social Competence of 36-Month-Olds: The Roles of Maternal Psychological Well-Being and Sensitivity

Authors
Chang, Young Eun
Issue Date
Oct-2013
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Maternal employment; Attitudes; Psychological well-being; Sensitivity; Social competence
Citation
JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES, v.22, no.7, pp 987 - 999
Pages
13
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES
Volume
22
Number
7
Start Page
987
End Page
999
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/14241
DOI
10.1007/s10826-012-9660-7
ISSN
1062-1024
1573-2843
Abstract
The relation of mothers' attitudes on the effects of maternal employment on children, psychological well-being, sensitivity of the mother, and children's socioemotional development were examined in mothers who worked full time (consistently) and mothers who were unemployed during their children's early years of growth from 6 months of age. Longitudinal observations of 1,213 mothers and children from age 1 to 36 months from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Study of Early Child Care were analyzed using structural equation models. Mothers and children benefited when maternal attitudes were consistent with the mothers' actual employment status. Among consistently employed mothers, those with positive attitudes about employment had better psychological well-being. When mothers who were unemployed, they believed that maternal employment would have positive consequences for their children's development, they preferred working outside home and they were more likely to show a low level of psychological well-being and poor quality of mother-child relation. Additionally, maternal well-being mediated the relation between a mother's attitudes and a child's social competence. For both groups, better psychological well-being of mothers was positively related to better child's socioemotional outcome. Maternal sensitivity, however, did not mediate the relation between maternal attitudes and child's social outcomes. The findings shed light on the need for a sensitive measure of characterizing mothers who work versus those who stay at home in order to better understand the effects on a child's development.
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Chang, Young Eun
사회과학대학 (사회복지)
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