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ArtikelChildren's Emerging Regulation of Conduct: Restraint, Compliance, and Internalization from Infancy to the Second Year  
Oleh: Kochanska, Grazyna ; Tjebkes, Terri L. ; Forman, David R.
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: Child Development vol. 69 no. 05 (Oct. 1998), page 1378-1389.
Topik: Restraint; Emergent Regulation of Conduct; Compliance; Children
Fulltext: 1132272.pdf (400.8KB)
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  • Perpustakaan PKPM
    • Nomor Panggil: C49
    • Non-tandon: 1 (dapat dipinjam: 0)
    • Tandon: tidak ada
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Isi artikelWe examined emergent regulation of conduct from infancy to the second year. Multiple observational measures at home and in the laboratory assessed, at 8-10 months, the child's restraint and attention (N = 1J2), and at 13-15 months, compliance to mother, internalization of her prohibition, and quality of motivation in the mother-child teaching context (N = 108). We replicated the findings previously reported for older children that supported our view of compliance and noncompliance as heterogenous: Committed compliance was higher to maternal "don'ts" than "dos," with the reverse true for situational compliance; girls surpassed boys in committed compliance; and committed, but not situational, compliance related positively, and passive non compliance negatively, to children's internalization of maternal prohibition. We extended previous work into three new directions: children's committed compliance and passive noncompliance in control contexts related predictably to their motivation in mother-child teaching contexts; restraint at 8-10 months predicted higher committed compliance at 13-15 months; and focused attention at 8-10 months was associated with contemporaneous restraint and modestly with committed compliance to maternal "dos" at 13-15 months.
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