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The Process Linking Child-Invested Contingent Self-Esteem and Conditional Regard: The Roles of Maternal Anger and its Regulation.

Authors :
Steffgen, Sarah Teresa
Otterpohl, Nantje
Wessing, Franziska
Schwinger, Malte
Assor, Avi
Kanat-Maymon, Yaniv
Gueta, Bat El
Stiensmeier-Pelster, Joachim
Source :
Journal of Child & Family Studies; Sep2022, Vol. 31 Issue 9, p2412-2423, 12p, 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Parents whose self-esteem is contingent on their children's achievements tend to exert more control over their children by displaying decreased affection and regard after failure in school (parental academic conditional negative regard). The current study examined parental anger and dysregulated anger expression as possible mechanisms in the respective association. In total, 221 mothers reported their child-invested contingent self-esteem, habitual dysregulated anger expression, anticipated anger after child failure, and their explicit use of conditional negative regard; their 12- to 14-year-old adolescent children reported perceived conditional negative regard. The moderated mediation analysis revealed that anger after child failure partially mediated the effect of child-invested contingent self-esteem on maternal explicit use of conditional negative regard, which, in turn, predicted adolescents' perception of conditional negative regard. The effect of anger was moderated by dysregulated anger expression, and anger was only positively related to conditional negative regard when expressed as medium- to highly-dysregulated. The results support our hypotheses and provide an explanation for parental application of conditional negative regard apart from socialization goals or a lack of knowledge about its suboptimal nature. Furthermore, our results underscore the importance of parents' self-esteem concerns and strategies for anger regulation. We discuss the practical implications of an anger-driven, reactive type of conditional regard. Highlights: Mothers whose self-esteem depends on their child's performance use more achievement-oriented conditional negative regard. Mothers' anger following failure mediated the relation between their contingent self-esteem and use of conditional regard. Mothers' dysregulated anger expression exacerbated the positive association between anger and conditional regard. Mothers' contingent self-esteem indirectly related to both mothers' and children's reports of conditional regard. Mothers' use of conditional negative regard may result from mothers' unfavorable regulation of self-esteem loss and anger. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10621024
Volume :
31
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Child & Family Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159001475
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-022-02316-y