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The System for Coding Interactions and Family Functioning (SCIFF) in low-income and urban adolescents

Authors :
Benjamin Bazzi
Arianna M. Gard
Luke W. Hyde
Colter Mitchell
Rebecca Waller
Sara McLanahan
Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
Christopher S. Monk
Isaiah Sypher
Source :
Psychol Assess
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2019.

Abstract

Reliable, brief, and cost-effective methods to assess parenting are critical for advancing etiological research and translational efforts within parenting science. In the current study, we adapted the System for Coding Interactions and Family Functioning (SCIFF) for use among a sample of mostly racial minority adolescents aged 15 years old, growing up in a low-income urban setting. A multiethnic team coded videotapes of a family interaction task designed to elicit conflict. First, we assessed the reliability of SCIFF codes (N = 187; 54% female; 77% African American). Second, we tested whether SCIFF codes assessing harsh parenting, positive parenting, dyadic conflict, and dyadic closeness converged with parent-child reports of the same constructs. Third we explored links between observed harsh and positive parenting in early childhood (ages 3 and 5) and SCIFF codes at age 15. Our training and SCIFF coding protocols produced high interrater reliability. In support of convergent validity, we found specificity in the associations between negative aspects of parenting across methods: the SCIFF harsh parenting and dyadic conflict codes uniquely converged with concurrent parent-child reports of the same constructs. There was a longitudinal cross-construct association between more observed harshness in early childhood and lower dyadic closeness at age 15. Finally, the convergence of the SCIFF codes with other parenting measures was similar by gender and for families living below or above 200% of the poverty line. A modified version of the SCIFF can be used with reliability in low-income urban samples with variation in gender and race. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

Details

ISSN :
1939134X and 10403590
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychological Assessment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2d370961f8831636181bf43b326fbc2