• Title/Summary/Keyword: nonmaternal care

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An Ecological Study on Infant-Mother Attachment in a Nonmaternal Care (타인 양육 영아-어머니 애착에 대한 생태학적 연구)

  • 양연숙
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.40 no.7
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    • pp.1-14
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    • 2002
  • This study investigated infant, mother/famny, and nonmaternal care characteristics contribution to infant- mother attachment through ecological perspective. Participants were forty 12-to 18-month-o1d infants and their mothers. Infants were observed in the Strange Situation to assess the pattern of infant-mother attachment; the Observational Ratings of the Caregiving Environment was used to assess the caregiving environment. Mothers were interviewed with the questionnaires, and observed in the laboratory "living room". There were significant effects of material sensitivity/responsiveness and good quality child care on secure attachment. Infant, mother/family, and nonmaternal care characteristics were mutually related.

Emotion Regulation Among Nonmaternal Care Infants: The Effect of Separation/Nonmaternal Care Experiences and Child/Mother Variables (타인양육 영아의 정서조절: 격리 및 타인양육 특성과 어머니 및 영아 특성의 영향)

  • 양연숙;조복희
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.39 no.3
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    • pp.67-81
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    • 2001
  • The purpose of this investigation was to examine whether early child-care experience, alone or in combination with mother/child factors, was associated with emotion regulation. Participants were forty 12-18 month-old infants, their mothers and their caregivers. Infants were observed in the Strange Situation to assess the pattern of emotion regulation. Mothers were interviewed, given Questionnaires, and observed in play. Caregivers were observed in child care to assess the caregiving environment. There were significant main effects of good quality child care on open emotion expression and heightening emotion expression. Significant interaction effects revealed that infants were more likely to be open emotion expression when high maternal sensitivity /responsiveness was combined with good quality child care, or nonmaterial care initiated prior to six month of age. Infants were more likely to be minimizing emotion expression when low maternal sensitivity/responsiveness was combined with nonmaternal care initiated after six month of age, or more than one care arrangement. Difficult temperament infants received nonrelative care were somewhat more likely to be minimizing emotion expression. Infants were more Likely to be heightening emotion expression when high maternal sensitivity/responsiveness was combined with relative care. Boys experiencing nonrelative care were more Likely to be heightening emotion expression.

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The Relations between Familial Predictors and Infant-Toddler Development: Comparison between Full-Time Child Care vs. Exclusive Mother Care (가족관련변인과 영유아발달의 관계 : 종일제 보육과 어머니 단독양육의 비교)

  • Chang, Young Eun
    • Korean Journal of Childcare and Education
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.159-176
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    • 2014
  • This study aims to examine the suggestions by studies that family predictors are related to developmental outcomes more strongly for children reared principally by their parents compared to those with extensive child care experience. Zero-order correlations between family predictors and developmental outcomes were conducted and the significance of differences in correlation coefficients between the two child care groups were examined. There was no evidence that there exist systematic differences between the two groups in predictive power of family factors except a few exceptions. At 2 years, social parenting style was more strongly associated with communication ability in the extensive child care group. At 3 years, some HOME subscales were related to a child's expressive and receptive vocabulary skills in significantly greater magnitudes in the mother care group. The findings also implied the potential contribution of child care environment on developmental outcomes for those who spend extensive hours in nonmaternal care.