13 results on '"Charles M. Super"'
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2. Issue Information.
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- 2021
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3. Issue Information.
- Published
- 2021
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4. Research on parental burnout across cultures: Steps toward global understanding.
- Author
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Super, Charles M. and Harkness, Sara
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,MEDIATION (Statistics) ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,TEST validity ,FACTOR structure - Abstract
In this commentary we first examine psychometric issues in the ambitious enterprise of cross‐cultural application of the Parental Burnout Assessment (PBA). The present reports span a wide range of cultural places. Overall, the PBA presents good face validity and a strong replication of factor structure; future multi‐group confirmatory factor analysis will enable quantitative comparisons not currently possible. Content validity is not fully addressed in these reports, so nuanced differences in the nature of parental burnout remain an interesting possibility. Variation the PBA's correlations with other measures, such as education and household type, suggests cultural mediation in the causes and dynamics of parental burnout. In the second part of our commentary, we address more directly whether parental burnout is influenced by the sociocultural context in which it is manifest. We propose that future research will benefit from more precise description of the particular cultural community involved, including the settings, customs, and ethnotheories of parenting. Gaining a global understanding of parental burnout, in other words, rests on building firmer and more differentiated pictures at the local level. The papers in this volume nevertheless present an important step forward in what promises to be an exciting journey of discovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Culture and human development: Where did it go? And where is it going?
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Harkness, Sara and Super, Charles M.
- Subjects
ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY ,INDIVIDUAL development ,CULTURE ,TWENTIETH century ,SONICATION - Abstract
Culture and human development blossomed as a research enterprise in the last quarter of the 20th century; the energy and innovation of that enterprise are less evident now. Where did it go, and where is it going? In this essay, we examine the shifting fields of cross‐cultural psychology, psychological anthropology, cultural psychology, indigenous psychology, and the surge of research on Individualism/Collectivism. Offering both academic and personal perspectives, we reflect on the importance of "culture" as a construct, and the value of focusing on individual development in that context. The way forward now, we suggest, is international and intercultural collaboration of scientists. The challenge for training new researchers from diverse backgrounds, however, is to equip them with the knowledge and insights gained from cross‐cultural psychology, psychological anthropology, and their own cultures, rather than simply making the next generation of scholars into new representatives of Western theories of development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Culture and the perceived organization of newborn behavior: A comparative study in Kenya and the United States.
- Author
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Super, Charles M. and Harkness, Sara
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COMPARATIVE psychology ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,COGNITIVE structures ,BEHAVIORAL assessment ,MOTOR ability - Abstract
The behavior of newborns is ambiguous. Cultural models—representations shared by members of a community—provide new parents and others with a cognitive and motivational structure to understand them. This study asks members of several cultural groups (total n = 100) to judge the "similarity" of behavioral items in the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS). Data were obtained from NBAS experts, mothers, and undergraduates in Massachusetts, and mothers and high‐school students in rural Kenya. Multidimensional scaling of their judgments reveals that NBAS experts were especially attentive to a dimension of State Control—exactly as the scale emphasizes. Kenyan mothers focused on a dimension of motor responsiveness—in accord with their concern and practices regarding motor development, and the Massachusetts mothers organized their judgments around cognitive competence—abilities emphasized in contemporary discussions of early development. The US students appear to be more similar to US mothers than did the Kenya students to the Kenyan mothers. Each adult group's representation reflects their cultural values and goals, and helps them understand the newborn child in local terms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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7. Parents, Preschools, and the Developmental Niches of Young Children: A Study in Four Western Cultures.
- Author
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Harkness, Sara, Super, Charles M., Bonichini, Sabrina, Bermudez, Moises Rios, Mavridis, Caroline, Schaik, Saskia D. M., Tomkunas, Alexandria, and Palacios, Jesús
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PARENT-child relationships ,WORKING parents ,POSTINDUSTRIAL societies ,FAMILY-school relationships ,CHILD care ,PRESCHOOL children ,PRESCHOOLS - Abstract
Recent years have witnessed increasing attention to early childhood education and care as a foundation for children's successful development in school and beyond. The great majority of children in postindustrial societies now attend preschools or daycare, making this setting a major part of their culturally constructed developmental niches. Although an extensive literature demonstrates the importance of parental involvement or engagement in their children's schools, relationships between parents and their children's preschools have received scant attention in the research literature. This paper aims to address that gap through a mixed‐methods cross‐cultural study of parents and preschools in four Western countries: Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and the United States. Following an introduction to national systems of preschool in each country, parents' involvement and ideas about the family–school relationship are presented, drawing from parental diaries and from semistructured interviews (n = 110). Results indicate areas of cross‐cultural similarity but also some differences, especially between the U.S. sample and the three European samples. Discussion addresses the question of how preschools and parents can work together to create optimal developmental niches for their young children. The authors also suggest that parent–preschool relationships deserve greater attention by both researchers and program developers [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Chinese Mothers' Cultural Models of Children's Shyness: Ethnotheories and Socialization Strategies in the Context of Social Change.
- Author
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Liu, Jia Li, Harkness, Sara, and Super, Charles M.
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SOCIALIZATION ,SOCIAL change ,BASHFULNESS ,PARENT attitudes ,CHINESE people ,FAMILY roles ,STRICT parenting ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Research by Xinyin Chen and others has documented that in past decades, shyness in Chinese children was associated with leadership, peer‐acceptance, and academic achievement. In contemporary China, shyness predicts maladaptive youth outcomes. Although social, political, and economic transitions are presumed to be responsible for this shift, little is known about how societal change mediates parents' beliefs and the socialization of shy children. This qualitative study explored implicit parenting cognitions and attitudes about shyness in a Chinese urban middle‐class group of mothers (N = 20). Thematic analyses revealed mothers' beliefs about the role of family socialization in the development/maintenance of shyness and the complexities between shyness and introversion. Mothers spoke of increased use of child‐centered parenting practices and the promotion of assertive and self‐assured traits. These findings highlight how Chinese parenting has contributed to the decline in the adaptive value of shyness, and inform the development of parenting interventions for shy Chinese children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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9. Developmental Continuity and Change in the Cultural Construction of the "Difficult Child": A Study in Six Western Cultures.
- Author
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Super, Charles M., Harkness, Sara, Bonichini, Sabrina, Welles, Barbara, Zylicz, Piotr Olaf, Bermúdez, Moisés Rios, and Palacios, Jesús
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SOCIAL change ,CONTINUITY ,AGE groups ,CULTURE ,CONSTRUCTION - Abstract
This study explores the cultural construction of "difficult" temperament in the first 2 years of life, as well as the logistical and thematic continuity across infancy and childhood in what mothers perceive as difficult. It extends earlier work regarding older children in six cultural sites: Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the United States. In order to compare temperament profiles across sites, a "derived etic" version of standard temperament scales is constructed, and then examined in relation to mothers' global ratings of how "difficult" the child is to manage. Results are compared to the earlier report. Negative Mood and low Adaptability tend to be problematic in most sites in both age groups. High Activity and Intensity increase in their relevance to difficulty from the first 2 years to early childhood. In some sites, dispositions such as low Approach become less difficult to manage. Of particular note are culturally unique patterns of continuity that appear to be related to larger cultural themes. These results have implications for our theoretical understanding of parenting, as well as for educational and clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. Cross‐Cultural Research on Parents: Applications to the Care and Education of Children Introduction to the Issue.
- Author
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Harkness, Sara and Super, Charles M.
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CHILD care ,EDUCATION ,PARENTS ,INFANTS - Abstract
The seven papers in this issue address a variety of challenges that parents in several different cultural places encounter as they do their best to ensure their children's safe, happy, and successful development from infancy through middle childhood: infant sleep, developmental agendas, temperament, preschools, academic success, and learning to be a parent in a new cultural environment. The authors use a varied of methods — qualitative and quantitative — to understand how parental figures in Botswana, China, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the United States think about the needs of their children, their own role as parents, and the caretaking practices that follow. A final Commentary focuses on the power of parental ethnotheories in changing societies, and on the complexities and importance of cross‐cultural research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Parents' Concepts of the Successful School Child in Seven Western Cultures.
- Author
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Feng, Xin, Harkness, Sara, Super, Charles M., Welles, Barbara, Bermudez, Moises Rios, Bonichini, Sabrina, Moscardino, Ughetta, and Zylicz, Piotr O.
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SCHOOL children ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,PARENTS ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,CULTURE ,FACTOR structure - Abstract
Although children's school success is a parental goal in most cultures, there is wide cultural variation in the qualities that parents most wish their children to develop for that purpose. A questionnaire contained forty‐one child qualities was administered to 757 parents in seven cultural communities in Australia, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the United States. Exploratory factor analysis was conducted separately within each sample and results revealed both similarities and differences across the seven samples. The factor structures showed considerable similarity: four domains of characteristics (Cognitive Qualities, Social Qualities, Negative temperament, and Good Characters) were identified in each sample as strongly influencing children's success in school. However, parents differed across the seven cultural communities in the importance they attributed to these factors. The results also reveal some culturally unique patterns in parents' concepts of the successful schoolchild; the seven samples were differentiated by distinctive associations of individual qualities around the four common domains. These results offer new insights for incorporating perspectives from other cultures into our own concepts of what qualities are most important for children's success in school, and how educators can be cognizant of differing cultural perspectives represented by the families whose children are their students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. Getting the Baby on a Schedule: Dutch and American Mothers' Ethnotheories and the Establishment of Diurnal Rhythms in Early Infancy.
- Author
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Schaik, Saskia D. M., Mavridis, Caroline, Harkness, Sara, De Looze, Margaretha, Blom, Marjolijn J. M., and Super, Charles M.
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CIRCADIAN rhythms ,INFANTS ,INFANT care ,SLEEP-wake cycle ,MOTHERS ,PARENT-infant relationships - Abstract
One of the earliest challenges for infants and their parents is developing a diurnal sleep–wake cycle. Although the human biological rhythm is circadian by nature, its development varies across cultures, based in part on "zeitgebers" (German: literally "time‐givers") or environmental cues. This study uses the developmental niche framework by Super and Harkness to address two different approaches to getting the baby on a schedule. 33 Dutch and 41 U.S. mothers were interviewed when their babies were 2 and 6 months old. A mixed‐methods analysis including counts of themes and practices as well as the examination of actual quotes shows that Dutch mothers emphasized the importance of regularity in the baby's daily life and mentioned practices to establish regular schedules for the baby's sleeping, eating, and time outside more than American mothers did. The U.S. mothers, in contrast, discussed regularity less often and when they did, they emphasized that their baby should develop his or her own schedule. Furthermore, actual daily schedules, based on time allocation diaries kept by the mothers, revealed greater regularity among the Dutch babies. Discussion focuses on how culture shapes the development of diurnal rhythms, with implications for "best practices" for infant care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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13. Grandmothers' Developmental Expectations for Early Childhood in Botswana.
- Author
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Tsamaase, Marea, Harkness, Sara, and Super, Charles M.
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GRANDMOTHERS ,PRESCHOOL children ,READINESS for school ,PRESCHOOL teachers ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
Urban and rural grandmothers (n = 20) in Botswana participated in focus groups to learn their expectations for the acquisition of skills by preschool children. Their expectations for self‐care, traditional politeness, and participation in household chores were dramatically earlier than developmental timetables reported for Western middle‐class populations. There are some differences, however, in the urban and rural grandmothers' expectations. Rural grandmothers had earlier expectations for self‐care skills and participation in household chores, and they had more specific expectations for mastering Setswana cultural customs. In addition, some urban grandmothers, who were generally more educated, described using more reciprocal communication, and they believed in playing with their grandchildren, whereas the rural grandmothers' communication was more instructional, and they insisted that children should play away from adults. Strikingly, there was no mention of school readiness goals or activities by either group, suggesting a "cultural misfit" between the standard early childhood curriculum, largely imported from the United States and other Western countries, and the cultural backgrounds of Batswana families. To create a more workable partnership between preschool teachers and grandparents—important caretakers of young children, both traditionally and currently—will require efforts to acknowledge and promote the values and expectations of both groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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