African American mothers talk to their preadolescents about honesty and lying.

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Objectives: While existing work points to the ways parenting behaviors and specific value socialization approaches influence children's internalization of moral values (Baumrind, Child Development 43, 261-267, 1972; Hoffman, Empathy and moral development: Implications for caring and justice, 2001; Grusec & Davidov, Child Development, 81, 687-709, 2010), little work has considered the experiences of African American and lower-income families. The current study capitalized on the availability of 53 video-recorded mother-preadolescent conversations about their disagreements from the Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project (Vogel et al., Early head start children in grade 5: Long-term follow-up of the early head start research and evaluation study sample. OPRE Report # 2011-8, 2010). Methods: Using inductive analysis, we assessed mothers' affective tone, communication styles, and message content during the discussion of problems involving honesty and lying. Results: Mothers tended to display warm yet firm affect, incorporate both autonomy-supportive and dominant-directive communication styles, assert that lying is never acceptable, and explain why lying is problematic. Conclusions: Mothers' affect, communication styles, and message content reflected a no-nonsense approach to transmitting values about honesty to their children. To our knowledge, the current study is the first qualitative observational investigation of low-income African American mothers' conversations regarding honesty with their children. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
  • Authors

  • Booker, Jordan A
  • Ispa, Jean M
  • Im, Jihee
  • Maiya, Sahitya
  • Roos, Joy
  • Carlo, Gustavo
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • July 2021
  • Keywords

  • Black or African American
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Mother-Child Relations
  • Mothers
  • Parenting
  • Poverty
  • Socialization
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Start Page

  • 521
  • End Page

  • 530
  • Volume

  • 27
  • Issue

  • 3