1. Coping as a Mediator Between Parental Attachment and Resilience: An Examination of Differential Effects Between Chinese Adolescents From Single Parent Families Versus Those From Intact Families
- Author
-
Xiamei Guo
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,China ,Coping (psychology) ,Single-Parent Family ,Adolescent ,05 social sciences ,Single parent ,050301 education ,050109 social psychology ,Resilience, Psychological ,Object Attachment ,Differential effects ,Nuclear Family ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Mediator ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Humans ,Female ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Parent-Child Relations ,Psychology ,0503 education ,General Psychology - Abstract
The crude divorce rate has been increasing steadily for over a decade in China. Consequently, more and more children have to face the challenge of growing up in single parent families. The current study investigated the mediating effects of problem-oriented and emotion-oriented coping on the relationship between parental attachment and psychological resilience among a sample of Chinese adolescents from single parent families and intact families. Participants were 975 high school students (44.30% males; aged 15–19 years, M = 16.32 years, SD = 0.74), 871 from intact families and 104 from single parent families. Structural equation modeling showed that security in maternal attachment was positively associated with resilience through the indirect effect of reduced emotion-oriented coping among adolescents from single parent families. Among adolescents from intact families, security in maternal attachment was both directly associated with resilience and indirectly through enhanced problem-oriented and reduced emotion-oriented coping. Security in paternal attachment was associated with resilience both directly and indirectly through enhanced problem-oriented coping as well among those from intact families. Female adolescents exhibited significantly lower levels of resilience than male adolescents did regardless of the marital status of their parents. Limitations and suggestions for future research are discussed.
- Published
- 2018