2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10826-014-9980-x
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Facilitative Parenting and Children’s Social, Emotional and Behavioral Adjustment

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Cited by 28 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…This parental support could have aided in the improvements observed in the pragmatic language skills as only three clinic sessions were provided, and children with ADHD continued to show gains beyond the intervention at the one month follow‐up. This is similar to previous research that has shown that facilitative parenting supports the development of children's social and emotional competence and effective peer relationships and can be a protective factor for children against a wide range of adjustment problems (Healy, Sanders & Iyer, ; Hoza et al ., ). Parents in this study were interviewed after delivering the intervention.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This parental support could have aided in the improvements observed in the pragmatic language skills as only three clinic sessions were provided, and children with ADHD continued to show gains beyond the intervention at the one month follow‐up. This is similar to previous research that has shown that facilitative parenting supports the development of children's social and emotional competence and effective peer relationships and can be a protective factor for children against a wide range of adjustment problems (Healy, Sanders & Iyer, ; Hoza et al ., ). Parents in this study were interviewed after delivering the intervention.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This may involve referral in the most extreme cases to professional services outside the school, which according to the victimized students occurs in 12% of cases, and/or coaching the student to develop interpersonal skills to effectively deal with being bullied, such as 'fogging' (19). Working closely with parents and offering them emotional support and advice can also make an important contribution [40].…”
Section: Implications For Interventions In Cases Of Bullyingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is acknowledged that many other factors may affect the effectiveness of teacher interventions. These include personality attributes, such as personal aggressiveness, in part genetically determined [44], and home backgrounds that may result in some children having inadequate social skills [40]. In this study bullying was assessed in a general sense, without considering specific forms of bullying such as cyberbullying and how well each form is addressed by schools.…”
Section: Strengths and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers have therefore investigated how a child's resources can be developed to help them grow and learn from positive stress. Within this line of inquiry, the role that parents play in helping children deal with stress has been investigated in non-clinical samples (Hardy, 1993;Healy, Sanders, & Iyer, 2014;McLeod, Wood, & Weisz, 2007;Wolfradt, Hempel, & Miles, 2003) as well as special needs, at risk and clinical samples (Burgess, Sly, Morawska Cooper, & Devadason, 2008;Morawska, Stelzer, & Burgess 2008;Morawska & Sanders, 2008;Tellegen & Sanders, 2014). Summarizing the literature on the link between parenting and childhood stress, Power (2004) concluded that "Children who approach potentially stressful events with active forms of coping have parents who are warm and supportive, and who employ authoritative control practices" (Power, 2004: p. 305).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%