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Household chaos - links with parenting and child behaviour
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 17:50 authored by Jo Coldwell, Alison PikeAlison Pike, Judy DunnBackground: The study aimed to confirm previous findings showing links between household chaos and parenting in addition to examining whether household chaos was predictive of children's behaviour over and above parenting. In addition, we investigated whether household chaos acts as a moderator between parenting and children's behaviour. Method: The sample consisted of 118 working- and middle-class two-parent English families with two children aged 4–8. Parents provided reports of the parent–child relationship, the level of chaos in their home and the children's problematic behaviour. The children also provided reports of parent–child relationships via a puppet interview. Results: The results confirmed the links between household chaos and parenting, and indicated that household chaos is predictive of children's problem behaviour over and above parenting. In addition, in a minority of cases, household chaos played a moderating role between parenting and children's behaviour in that it exacerbated the effect of poorer quality parenting on children's behaviour. Conclusions: Household chaos is able to work in an additive way and predict children's problem behaviour over and above parenting, and is particularly potent when in combination with less positive/more negative parenting.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Journal of Child Psychology and PsychiatryISSN
0021-9630Publisher
WileyExternal DOI
Issue
11Volume
47Page range
1116-1122Pages
7.0Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Notes
Senior author. Coldwell was Pike's research fellow.Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes