AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at how marital adjustment influences maternal warmth over time, focusing on married mothers of first-born 4th graders during their transition to early adolescence.
  • The researchers suggested that improved coparenting support acts as a key factor by which marital quality impacts parenting behaviors.
  • Findings support that better marital relationships lead to more coparenting support, which in turn enhances maternal warmth, indicating a potential area for parenting intervention strategies.

Article Abstract

This study assessed the longitudinal process by which marital adjustment affects change in maternal warmth over time. Change in coparenting support was examined as the potential mechanism by which the marriage affects parenting. Self-report data were gathered from 148 married mothers of first-born 4th graders at 3 time points, over the transition to early adolescence. Path analyses supported the proposed hypothesis, indicating that marital adjustment leads to increased coparenting support, which then leads to increased maternal warmth. Two alternative models of the time-ordered direction of effects among the study variables were ruled out. This study has important implications for the development of parenting interventions targeting the promotion of maternal warmth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0893-3200.21.2.288DOI Listing

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