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10 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Survival of Offspring
A function of the family that pertains to ensuring the survival of offspring by providing for their needs
Economic Functions
A function of the family that pertains to providing the means for children to acquire the skills and other resources they need to be economically productive as adults
Cultural Training
A function of the family that pertains to teaching children the basic values in their culture
Family Dynamics
The way in which the family operates as a whole
Parenting Styles
Parenting behaviors and attitudes that set the emotional climate in regard to parent - child interactions, such as parental responsiveness and demandingness
Authoritative Parenting
A parenting style that is high in demandingness and supportiveness. Parents set clear standards and limits for their children and are firm about enforcing them; at the same time, they allow their children considerable autonomy within those limits , are attentive and responsive to their children's concerns and needs, and respect and consider their children's perspective
Authoritarian Parenting
A parenting style that is high in demandingness and low in responsiveness. Authoritarian parents are non-responsive to their children's needs and tend to enforce their demands through the exercise of parental power and use of threats and punishment. They are oriented toward obedience and authority and expect their children to comply with their demands without question or explanation
Permissive Parenting
A parenting style that is high in responsiveness but low in demandingness. Parents are responsive to their children's needs and do not require their children to regulate themselves or act in appropriate or mature ways
Rejecting-Neglecting (Disengaged) Parenting
A parenting style that is low in both responsiveness and demandingness. Parents do not set limits for or monitor their children's behavior, are not supportive of them, and sometimes are rejecting or neglectful. They tend to be focused on their own needs rather than their children's.
Bidirectionality of Parent-Child Interactions
The idea that parents and their children are mutually affected by each other's characteristics and behaviors