Family temporal organization and children's affect regulation: A quantitative and qualitative study of first generation Dominican families.

Item

Title
Family temporal organization and children's affect regulation: A quantitative and qualitative study of first generation Dominican families.
Identifier
AAI3283590
identifier
3283590
Creator
Cabral, Alba.
Contributor
Advisers: Peter Fraenkel | Paul Wachtel
Date
2007
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Psychology, Clinical | Hispanic American Studies
Abstract
This study examined the hypothesis that temporal organization of family life is associated with children's affect regulation in first generation Dominican families. Eighteen families with children between ages one and half and five participated in this study, completing questionnaires about family time and routines, children's affect regulation, and child behavior problems. The families participated in interviews that inquired into family routines, family time and children's affect regulation according to the parent. Four of these families were selected for qualitative analysis of themes that illuminated the hypotheses tested. Correlational analysis confirmed the main hypothesis tested, namely, the existence of a relationship between family temporal organization and children's affect regulation. The results also showed general level of child problem behavior to be related to both temporal organization and to a measure that examined inappropriate regulation of emotion and emotional lability. This confirmed the hypothesis that temporal regulation at home may relate to a child's overall behavioral problems and that a child's ability to regulate emotions may be a factor in a child's general level of problem behavior. No relationship was found between family routines and a measure that assessed parenting behavior geared toward encouraging affect regulation by the child. Qualitative analysis proposed that child affect regulation may be linked to family temporal patterns that are both structured and flexible. The findings of this study suggest that the establishment of predictable day-to-day routines which allow space for some flexibility in the meaning of family time as a series of unpredictable instances to value togetherness, may be essential in supporting their own children's ability to regulate their emotional lives. Additionally, a parent's ability to focus on details of family schedules and child affective states may explain part of the connection between affect regulation and temporal organization. Clinical Implications of these findings are discussed.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs