This is the dimension of parenting that highlights how parents and children influence each other.
What is a bidirectional relationship?
This psychologist emphasized unconditional positive regard and a person/relationship-centered approach to relationships.
Who is Carl Rogers?
This English philosopher believe children were born as blank slates.
Who is John Locke?
When a parent provides support for a child to help them with a task they couldn't do on their own.
What is scaffolding?
What is the age of legal majority?
A college student returns home after graduation and the parents/child have to create new boundaries. This family structure is called this.
What is a renested family?
This type of care happens when a parent notices their child's verbal signals, body language, or facial expressions and responds appropriately to meet their needs.
What is responsive care?
This term describes judging another culture by one's own cultural standards, often believing one is superior.
What is enthocentrism?
This theory states that children develop within nested layers from microsystem to chronosystem.
What is Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Systems Theory?
This legal professional represents the best interests of the child in court, even if it is not what the child wants.
What is a Guardian Ad Litem (GAL)?
This is a lifelong process that teachers children how to function in society and shapes their identity values, and norms.
What is socialization?
A parent sets clear rules but also explains the reasons behind them, showing a balance between warmth and structure.
What is authoritative parenting?
This concept refers to understanding and respecting another culture's values and practice within their own context, rather than judging them by one's own standards.
What is cultural relativism?
In Piaget's theory, children in this stage often show egocentrism.
What is the preoperational stage?
This principle means "do no harm"
What is non-maleficence?
A parent notices that their approach to discipline closely mirrors how their own parents raised them.
What are family-of-origin influences?
Helps a child internalize rules and develop self-regulation.
What is appropriate discipline?
A parent explains to their child why another family celebrates holidays differently and encourages respect.
What is multicultural competency?
A teen struggles with questions like, "Who am I?" and "Where do I belong?". Erikson said this a psychosocial crisis.
What is identity vs role confusion?
What is a parenting plan?
Reese's friends have been giving her parenting advice that she isn't so sure about. She wants to check to make sure that she is receiving sound advice, so she decides to enroll in…
What is formal parenting education?
Juniper does not make room for negotiable rules with her children. She is extremely inflexible. Considering the Constructive Parenting Zone she's fallen into what negative outcome.
What is rigidity?
A mutual exchange in a relationship where the family members are influencing each other.
What is a reciprocal interaction?
After getting divorced, Monica gets to make all of the educational, health, and other important life decisions about her and Mark's children.
What is sole legal custody?