Using Empirically Supported Parenting Programs to Guide Interventions with Disadvantaged and Ethnically/Racially Diverse Parents

Posted by admin under Research into Practice View recent posts with the tag Research into Practice on Technorati Parenting View recent posts with the tag Parenting on Technorati Diversity View recent posts with the tag Diversity on Technorati Empirically supported therapy View recent posts with the tag Empirically supported therapy on Technorati ethnic View recent posts with the tag ethnic on Technorati racial View recent posts with the tag racial on Technorati socioeconomic View recent posts with the tag socioeconomic on Technorati 

Authors: Lisseth Rojas-Flores, Charmaine Lowe, and Sofia Herrera

Parent training has been well documented as one of the most effective methods for reducing behavioral problems in children (Brestan & Eyberg, 1998; Kazdin, 1997). In recent years, several research studies have endorsed the use of behavioral interventions to inform parenting practices. In particular, these methods advocate for guiding children away from maladaptive behavior in the context of fostering a positive and warm relationship between parents and children. Such research-informed behavioral interventions have been highly favorable not only for long-term treatment effects, but also as a cost cutting measure with built-in accountability to both managed care insurance panels (Taylor & Biglan, 1998) and the families they serve. As the United States continues to experience the growth of ethnically diverse populations, there is an increasing demand for the identification and implementation of effective interventions that may accommodate and address the unique needs of socioeconomically disadvantaged and ethnically diverse families. Empirically-supported parenting programs (ESP) have the potential of meeting the accountability movement in mental health while effectively meeting the needs of diverse communities.

Attachment to God and Parents: Testing the Correspondence vs. Compensation Hypotheses

Posted by admin under Modeling View recent posts with the tag Modeling on Technorati Parenting View recent posts with the tag Parenting on Technorati Attachment View recent posts with the tag Attachment on Technorati God View recent posts with the tag God on Technorati spirituality View recent posts with the tag spirituality on Technorati Dismissing View recent posts with the tag Dismissing on Technorati Fearful View recent posts with the tag Fearful on Technorati emotionally cold View recent posts with the tag emotionally cold on Technorati rigid View recent posts with the tag rigid on Technorati authoritarian View recent posts with the tag authoritarian on Technorati overprotective View recent posts with the tag overprotective on Technorati 

Authors: McDonald, Angie; Beck, Richard; Allison, Steve; Norswortby, Larry.

Journal of Psychology & Christianity, Vol. 24(1), Spr 2005, pp. 21-28

Abstract:

The relationship between early caregiver experiences and attachment to God was explored in the current study. Using the Attachment to God Inventory (AGI) developed by Beck and McDonald, the relationship between parent-child attachment and attachment to God was explored among a college population. In addition, parental spirituality and religious emphases in the home were investigated. Comparisons of the AGI with parent-child attachment measures support a correspondence between working models of parents and God. Respondents that reported coming from homes that were emotionally cold or unspiritual exhibited higher levels of avoidance of intimacy in their relationship to God, a trend consistent with a Dismissing attachment style. Overprotective, rigid, or authoritarian homes were associated with higher levels of both avoidance of intimacy and anxiety over lovability in relationship to God, a trend characterized by the Fearful attachment style.



The Journal of Psychology and Christianity

The Jounal of Pyschology and Christianity is an official publication of the Christian Association for Psychological Studies, Inc. (CAPS), designed to provide scholarly interchange among Christian professionals in the psychological and pastoral professions.

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