1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0145-2134(99)00006-x
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Effects of parental verbal aggression on children’s self-esteem and school marks

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Cited by 90 publications
(70 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…In contrast, the effect of corporal punishment was noted only with regard to the level of habitual-cognitive readiness in the Polish sample and emotional-impulsive readiness in the American sample. This pervasive impact of psychological aggression highlights the fact that psychological and verbal aggression is as harmful for child outcomes as corporal punishment, a conclusion which is consistent with previous research findings (Solomon & Serres, 1999). In fact, psychological aggression and/or verbal aggression may be used more frequently than corporal punishment, as it may precede an act of physical discipline due to being evaluated by the parents as a "milder" disciplinary technique that may preclude the need for corporal punishment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…In contrast, the effect of corporal punishment was noted only with regard to the level of habitual-cognitive readiness in the Polish sample and emotional-impulsive readiness in the American sample. This pervasive impact of psychological aggression highlights the fact that psychological and verbal aggression is as harmful for child outcomes as corporal punishment, a conclusion which is consistent with previous research findings (Solomon & Serres, 1999). In fact, psychological aggression and/or verbal aggression may be used more frequently than corporal punishment, as it may precede an act of physical discipline due to being evaluated by the parents as a "milder" disciplinary technique that may preclude the need for corporal punishment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Relationships have been reported previously between violent assault and substance use in women (Kilpatrick, Acierno, Resnick, Saunders, & Best, 1997) and family violence and depression (Pianta & Egeland, 1994). Childhood maltreatment and family violence have been associated with less self-esteem in adulthood (Goodman & Dutton, 1996;Liem & Boudewyn, 1999;Mullen, Martin, Anderson, Romans, & Herbison, 1996;Solomon & Serres, 1999). Lower self-esteem has also predicted greater distress among homeless women (Nyamathi, Stein, & Bayley, 2000) and has been associated with more substance abuse in homeless populations (Unger, Kipke, Simon, Montgomery, & Johnson, 1997).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…Même si les portraits statistiques établis à partir des signalements retenus à la Bon nombre de chercheurs ont concentré leur attention à identifier les conséquences délétères pouvant découler des différentes formes que peut prendre la maltraitance et ce, autant sur les plans physique, sexuel, génésique, psychologique, affectif que comportemental (Browne et Finkelhor, 1986 ;Lizardi et al, 1995 ;MillerPerrin et Perrin, 1999 ;Solomon et Serres, 1999). En effet, les enfants maltraités physiquement ont tendance à manifester davantage de désordres affectifs tels que l'anxiété et la dépression que les enfants ne l'ayant pas été (Lizardi et al, 1995).…”
Section: Problématiqueunclassified
“…La maltraitance psychologique engendrerait, quant à elle, le renforcement chez les enfants d'une faible estime de soi et l'adoption de comportements agressifs et délinquants (Solomon et Serres, 1999). De son côté, la négligence provoquerait l'émergence de troubles de l'attachement, de difficultés relationnelles et l'utilisation de stratégies d'adaptation jugées inefficaces pour faire face aux difficultés de la vie (Crouch et Milner, 1993).…”
Section: Problématiqueunclassified
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