Childhood Development
Factors Influencing Early Childhood Development
Darling and Steinberg (1993) proposed a model of parenting that integrated several prior models. They discriminated between parenting practice and parenting style, with the former representing domain-specific parenting habits and the latter domain-independent social interactions between parent and child. A critical distinction between parenting practice and style, based on their model, is that style communicates to the child how the parent feels about the child rather than the child's behavior. The natural extension of this model is that a child's sense of self-worth is directly influenced by parenting style.
The parenting styles reviewed by Darling and Steinberg (1993) included authoritarian, authoritative, indulgent, and neglectful. Of these parenting styles, authoritative was viewed as producing the best developmental outcomes in terms of socialization, academic achievement, and emotional maturation. Using the model proposed by Maccoby and Martin in 1983, parenting styles could be described empirically along two dimensions: (1) the nature and frequency of demands placed on the child and (2) the nature of reinforcement. For example, an authoritative parent would rate high in terms of demands and reinforcement, while an authoritarian parent would rate high on demands and low on reinforcement. However, the authors noted that other contextual factors, such as socioeconomic status and ethnicity, can modify parenting style efficacy.
Darling and Steinberg's model for parenting styles, which incorporated several prior models, provided child developmental researchers with a framework for asking empirical questions. Much of the research that had been done by the time Darling and Steinberg published their article in 1993 had used older children and adolescents as study subjects. This essay will examine whether there is more recent evidence supporting a significant interaction between parenting styles and early childhood development.
Contemporary Parenting Styles...
Education in Early Childhood Early childhood programs are the first source of information and knowledge for the young minds that have just started to explore the world. It is high time when the child's brain and thoughts would be steered in any direction as they are raw and hungry for knowledge. The future development is based on the foundations set in this age as a strong base would help in lifelong
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The argument here is highly theoretical, ultimately defining crime as unskilled and essentially unrestrained activity -- supporting their later conclusions in a Genera Theory of Crime (Gottfredson & Hirschil 1986). Even here, however, some points of continuity with other research can be found. The authors ultimately maintain that criminal behavior arises out of a failure to meet the standards of normal behavior in society, and that the image of the
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