Family background effects on personality development and social acceptanceShow full item record
Title | Family background effects on personality development and social acceptance |
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Author | Cox, Samuel Harry |
Date | 1966 |
Genre | Dissertation |
Degree | Doctor of Philosophy |
Abstract | A network of background factors was hypothesized to affect personality development, and a complex of background and personality characteristics was hypothesized to influence acceptance-rejection by peers. Data were gathered to 100 families to measure variables at four levels: (A) Family background including social factors, (B) Parental child-rearing attitudes and practices, (C) Characteristics of the child, and (D) Social acceptance of the child by his peers. Results indicated that: (1) pivotal linkages were established throughout the hypothetical network of relationships; (2) family background factors were associated with variables at each of the other levels; (3) family tension had a disrupting influence on child-rearing practices, the child's characteristics, and on the social acceptance of the child by peers; (4) parental loving-rejecting showed influence on the child's personality development and social acceptance; (5) parental disagreement influenced the child's personality development in a wide area, especially that of ego development; and (6) the stimulus value of the child, in terms of his personality traits and characteristics, was the principal determinant of peer acceptance-rejection. |
Link | https://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/34627 |
Department | Psychology |
Advisor | Sells, Saul B. |
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Doctoral Dissertations [1526]
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