CHILDREN’S PERCEPTIONS OF PARENTING PRACTICES

Authors

  • Munita Dunn Centre of Student Communities, University of Stellenbosch.
  • Nelleke Keet Department of Social Work, Hugenote College, South Africa.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15270/48-1-107

Abstract

Parenthood poses unique challenges and is complicated if parents are unable to provide adequately for their offspring’s basic human needs. For the purpose of this article a distinction is made between poverty, referring to insufficient subsistence, and poverties, referring to deprivation in all life areas. Unmet needs of children implicate poverties in a wide array of spheres such as access to infrastructure, traditional family structures, parental warmth and guidance, technology and quality of life.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

BERNARD, E. & WHITLEY, J.R. 2002. Principles of research in behavioural science. Boston: McGraw-Hill.

BURNS, R.C. & KAUFMAN, S.H. 1972. Actions, styles and symbols in Kinetic Family Drawings (K-F-D): an interpretive manual. New York: Brunner/Mazel.

CARNE, A.M. 1949. The scope and limitations of the incomplete sentences test with special reference to the quantitative assessment of emotional instability. Pretoria: University of South Africa. (Unpublished Master’s Dissertation)

CHEAL, D. 2008. Sociology of family life. Canada: Palgrave Macmillan.

CHOUDHURY, I. & JABEEN, S.F. 2008. Perception of children on parenting practices. Nepal: Save the Children Sweden.

COLEY, R.L. & HERNANDEZ, D.C. 2006. Predictors of paternal involvement for resident and nonresident low-income fathers. Developmental Psychology, 42(6):1041-1056.

CRESSWELL, J.W. 2009. Research design. Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods approaches (3rd ed). California: Sage Publications.

DE VOS, A.S., STRYDOM, H., FOUCHÉ, C.B. & DELPORT, C.S.L. 2005. Research at grass roots: for the social sciences and human service professions. Pretoria: Van Schaik Publishers.

EAMON, M.K. & MULDER, C. 2005. Predicting antisocial behavior among Latino young adolescents: an ecological systems analysis. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 75(1):117-127.

ERIKSON, E.H. 1950. Childhood and society. New York: WW Norton.

GRINNELL, R.M. (Jr)., WILLIAMS, M. & UNRAU, Y.A. 2010. Research methods for BSW students (8th ed). Michigan: Pair Bond Publications.

HALPERN, R. 1990. Poverty and early childhood parenting: toward a framework for intervention. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 60(1):6-18.

KNOFF, H.M. & PROUT, H.T. 2003. Kinetic Family Drawing System for family and school: a handbook. Los Angeles: Western Psychological Services.

LI-GRINNING, C.P. 2007. Effortful control among low-income preschoolers in three cities: stability, change, and individual differences. Developmental Psychology, 43(1):208-221.

LOUW, D. & LOUW, A. 2007. Child and adolescent development. Bloemfontein: The University of the Orange Free State.

LOUW, D.A., VAN EDE, D.M. & LOUW, A.E. 1998. Human development (3rd ed). Pretoria: Kagiso Publishers.

MARGOW, R. & OXTOBY, R. 1987. Ouerskap sonder pyn. Kaapstad: Human & Rousseau.

MASLOW, A.H. 1970. Motivation and personality (rev ed). New York: Harper & Row.

MAX-NEEF, M., ELIZALDE, A. & HOPENHAYN, M. 1991. Development and human needs. In: MAX-NEEF, M. (ed) Human scale development, conception, application and further reflection. New York: Apex Press.

PARKE, R.D., SIMPKINS, S.D., McDOWELL, D.J., KIM, M., KILLIAN, C., DENNIS, J., FLYR, M.L., WILD, M. & RAH, Y. 2004. Relative contributions of families and peers to children’s social development. In: SMITH, P.K. & HART, C.H. (eds) Blackwell handbook of childhood social development. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

PATTERSON, C.J., VADEN, N.A., GRIESLER, P.C. & KUPERSMIDT, J.B. 1991. Income level, gender, ethnicity, and household composition as predictors of children’s peer companionship outside of school. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 12:447-465.

PAYNE, R. 1996. Understanding the framework of poverty. Instructional Leader IX (2). Texas: The Elementary Principals and Supervisors’ Association.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SEMINARS. 1992. The Draw-A-Person technique. Florida: Psychological Seminars.

ROCHE, K.M. & LEVENTHAL, T. 2009. Beyond neighborhood poverty: family management, neighborhood disorder, and adolescents’ early sexual onset. Journal of Family Psychology, 23(6):819-827.

SHAW, D.S., GILLIOM, M. & INGOLDSBY, E.M. 2003. Trajectories leading to school-age conduct problems. Developmental Psychology, 39(2):189-200.

SCARAMELLA, L.V., NEPPL, T.K., ONTAI, L.L. & CONGER, R.D. 2008. Consequences of socioeconomic disadvantage across three generations: parenting behavior and child externalizing problems. Journal of Family Psychology, 22(5):725-733.

TOWLE, C. 1965. Common human needs. New York: NASW.

VISSER, M. & MOLEKO, A.-G. 1999. High-risk behaviour of primary school learners. MRC Urban Health and Development Bulletin, 2(1):67-77.

WENCK, S. 1984. H-T-P drawings: an illustrated diagnostic handbook. Los Angeles: Western Psychological Services.

WILL, D. & WRATE, R.M. 1985. Integrated family therapy. London: Tavistock.

YAMA, M. 1990. The usefulness of human figure drawings as an index of overall adjustment. Journal of Personality Assessment, 54:78-86.

Downloads

Published

2014-06-12

How to Cite

Dunn, M., & Keet, N. (2014). CHILDREN’S PERCEPTIONS OF PARENTING PRACTICES. Social Work/Maatskaplike Werk, 48(1). https://doi.org/10.15270/48-1-107

Issue

Section

Articles