Beverly I. Fagot’s research while affiliated with Oregon Social Learning Center and other places

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Publications (78)


Prediction of Positive Peer Relations from Observed Parent–Child Interactions
  • Article

April 2006

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44 Reads

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19 Citations

Review of Social Development

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Beverly I. Fagot

The nature of 7-year-old children's (n = 140) positive peer relations was examined using a multi-method, multi-agent approach. A confirmatory factor analysis suggested three factors clustered by reporting agent and method: teachers' perceptions of the child's positive attributes, observation of the child-peer interaction in three play settings, and observation of the child-peer interaction in a teaching context. Similar pathways were found for boys and girls. Once it was established that stable constructs could be developed to measure positive peer relations, earlier parent-child characteristics were examined to assess their utility in predicting children's positive friendships. Parental scaffolding and warmth were measured at 18 months and 5 years of age. Structural equation modeling suggests that positive parent interactions were positively related to later peer relations, but this relationship was significant only for boys. Possible explanations for this sex difference are discussed.


The world of parents and peers: Coercive exchanges and children's social adaptation

April 2006

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253 Reads

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101 Citations

Review of Social Development

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Terry E. Duncan

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J. Mark Eddy

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[...]

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Rebecca Fetrow

The relation among child antisocial behavior, child coercive exchanges with parents and peers, and the social adaptation of middle-childhood-aged boys and girls was investigated. The 374 children were observed during laboratory tasks with their parents and during recess with peers. A covariance model was tested that hypothesized that coercive exchanges with parents and peers would contribute uniquely to a multiple-agent assessment of child antisocial behavior, supporting an ecological view of social development. A single model described both boys and girls adequately, although minor gender-specific variations in effect size did produce a better fit. Children's antisocial behavior was associated with school maladaption primarily among boys, as represented by academic engagement in the classroom and peer nominations of social preference. Children's antisocial behavior and coercive interactions, in contrast, were correlated with peer antisocial behavior in both girls and boys.


Parental depression, parenting and family adjustment, and child effortful control: Explaining externalizing behaviors for preschool children

June 2003

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220 Reads

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145 Citations

Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology

Contributions of symptoms of parental depression, marital/family adjustment, parents' coercive (physical restraint, criticism, directives) and instructional behaviors (cognitive guidance, i.e., explanations of goals/strategies, suggestions regarding strategies for completing tasks), and children's effortful control to preschool children's externalizing behavior problems were investigated. It was hypothesized that children's higher levels of effortful control serve a protective function, leading to lower levels of child conduct difficulties despite parental/familial risk factors. Higher levels of depressive symptoms, coercion, and cognitive guidance, along with lower levels of child effortful control, were associated with higher levels of child externalizing behaviors. Differences in hierarchical regression models were observed for data obtained from mothers and fathers, with maternal coercive behavior and cognitive guidance serving as statistically significant predictors of children's externalizing behavior and reports of marital/family adjustment predicting child externalizing problems described by fathers. These parental/family factors, along with child effortful control, should be considered in understanding the development of behavior problems in early childhood, and could be addressed within school or community-based interventions.


Instruction by Mothers and Fathers During Problem Solving With Their Young Children
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  • Publisher preview available

March 2002

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49 Reads

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44 Citations

Journal of Family Psychology

Mothers and fathers of 163 5-year-olds were observed interacting with their children in dyads on 2 separate occasions on a familiar and unfamiliar cognitive activity. Within- and between-family comparisons were conducted. Few differences in the instruction provided by mothers and fathers appeared, and those that did were on the unfamiliar task. On this task, instruction by mothers, within and across families, was more responsive to children's changing skill than was instruction by fathers. Directive and disapproving comments by parents were related to poorer posttest performance by the child. High level of instruction by both parents was related to better posttest performance than was low level of instruction by parents. Contributions of parents to their children's cognitive development are discussed.

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Infant temperament, pleasure in parenting, and marital happiness in adoptive families

September 2001

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281 Reads

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47 Citations

Infant Mental Health Journal

Temperamental characteristics have been related to later externalizing and internalizing behavioral outcomes. To assess the relationship between temperament and the early family environment, we measured infant temperament, pleasure in parenting, and marital happiness via parent report in 99 families with a nonrelative adoptive infant. Perceptions of child temperament were assessed using two subscales of the Infant Behavior Questionnaire (IBQ; Rothbart, 1981). Mothers and fathers who rated their adoptive child as showing more Distress to Limitations (on the IBQ) reported less pleasure in routine parenting activities; this effect was mediated by marital happiness for fathers. Mothers reported less pleasure in parenting with infants perceived to be more temperamentally fearful (on the IBQ). The bidirectional relationship between temperamental characteristics and pleasure in parenting is discussed. © 2001 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.



Coercive family processes: A replication and extension of Patterson's Coercion Model

January 2001

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1,888 Reads

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93 Citations

Aggressive Behavior

Patterson hypothesized that aggressive behavior develops in families when parents use coercion as the primary mode for controlling their children. The model has been tested with boys and older children. In this paper, through confirmatory factor analysis, we examine how well the coercion model generalizes to 5-year-old children (boys and girls). Our results suggest that the model fits the data similarly for boys and girls. Few sex differences in child antisocial behavior were found on observed or parent-rated measures, nor were differences found in observed parent aversive responses to child behavior. This implies that similar coercion processes apply to both boys and girls. Aggr. Behav. 27:14–25, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.


Coercive family processes: A replication and extension of Patterson?s coercion model

January 2001

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125 Reads

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72 Citations

Aggressive Behavior

Patterson hypothesized that aggressive behavior develops in families when parents use coercion as the primary mode for controlling their children. The model has been tested with boys and older children. In this paper, through confirmatory factor analysis, we examine how well the coercion model generalizes to 5-year-old children (boys and girls). Our results suggest that the model fits the data similarly for boys and girls. Few sex differences in child antisocial behavior were found on observed or parent-rated measures, nor were differences found in observed parent aversive responses to child behavior. This implies that similar coercion processes apply to both boys and girls. Aggr. Behav. 27:14–25, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.


Becoming an Adolescent Father: Precursors and Parenting

November 1998

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52 Reads

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146 Citations

Developmental Psychology

Precursors and outcomes of adolescent pregnancy receive considerable research attention; however, most studies deal with adolescent mothers. This study examined whether risk factors that are precursors to adolescent fatherhood would be consistent with the family coercion model (G. R. Patterson, 1976) of the development of antisocial behavior in childhood. Hypotheses were tested in the Oregon Youth Study (OYS) sample of 206 at-risk boys who were first seen at 9 or 10 years of age. At 18-20 years of age, the profiles for the 35 adolescent fathers included more arrests and substance use than the other OYS participants. At around 2 years of age, 40% of the children had no contact with their fathers. The children, compared with a normative control sample, had somewhat greater health risks. The at-risk parents, compared with a control sample, were observed to show higher levels of negative reactions when their children were working on a puzzle task.


Environmental and Genetic Variance in Children's Observed and Reported Maladaptive Behavior

November 1998

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164 Reads

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48 Citations

Child Development

The genetic and environmental contributions to children's maladaptive behavior are assessed in a sample of 154 twin pairs (77 MZ twin pairs and 77 DZ twin pairs), who range in age from 6 to 11 years. To bridge the strengths of behavioral genetic methods and environmental assessment techniques, we use a multimethod, multimeasure approach to data collection, and analyze the data using behavioral genetic modeling techniques. Results indicate that genetic variation accounts for a majority of the variance in parent-reported child maladaptive behavior (average = 62%). One parent-report measure also suggests a smaller, significant contribution of shared environmental variance. In contrast to the parental ratings, the observational coding and global impressions of parent-twin interactive behavior suggest that shared environment is the primary source of variance accounting for parent and child maladaptive behavior. This is due, in part, to the direct influence one's interactive partner has on the expression of maladaptive behavior in an interactive setting. When controlling for the co-participant's behavior, genetic variation increases and shared environmental variation decreases.


Citations (72)


... The limitations stemming from insufficient access to education and job prospects often culminate in a multitude of hardships, particularly prevalent among recipients of social grants and aspiring entrepreneurs in South Africa. Research by Egeland, Carlson & Sroufe (1993); Steinberg, Darling, Fletcher, Brown & Dornbusch (1995) and Fagot & Gauvain (1997) illuminate the extensive ramifications, including diminished quality of life, strained familial dynamics, and weakened parent-child relationships. Within this context, as elucidated by Duckworth & Sabates (2005), the pivotal role of parental guidance, familial environment, and socio-economic factors becomes even more pronounced, shaping the trajectory and aspirations of individuals navigating the complex landscape of social grants and entrepreneurship in South Africa. ...

Reference:

Social Issues Affecting Social Cohesion in Low-resource Communities in South Africa
Mother–Child Problem Solving: Continuity Through the Early Childhood Years

Developmental Psychology

... Subsequently, these styles may adversely affect peer relationships, or children may have inhibitions about engaging in social behavior based on a history of harsh treatment by parents (Patterson, 1982;Anthony et al., 2005;Hartas, 2011). Concurrent and longitudinal studies have found that hostile parenting was associated with lower levels of social competence and fewer prosocial skills in preschool-aged children (Eddy et al., 2001;Laible et al., 2004;Anthony et al., 2005;Hartas, 2011;Walker and Mac Phee, 2011). Overall, this literature finds that responsive parenting and hostile/ overreactive parenting shape children's level of social competence. ...

Coercive family processes: A replication and extension of Patterson?s coercion model
  • Citing Article
  • January 2001

Aggressive Behavior

... Some evidence does suggest that traditional types of scaffolding (e.g. development of problem solving skills) contribute not only to cognitive development, but also to individual differences in social competence with peers (Leve & Fagot, 1997;Vandell & Wilson, 1987). Findings from one study of caregiver interventions in peer conflicts of older children provide some initial evidence regarding the effects of caregiver scaffolding. ...

Prediction of Positive Peer Relations from Observed Parent-Child Interactions
  • Citing Article
  • July 1997

Review of Social Development

... La repetición de este patrón interactivo, originado en el contexto familiar, se generalizará al contexto escolar y a las interacciones entre iguales, cuyas consecuencias serán el rechazo de sus compañeros, el bajo rendimiento académico, el descenso de la autoestima y la implicación con otros iguales problemáticos entre los que la conducta coercitiva será valorada y reforzada (Patterson, 1986). Más recientemente, Eddy, Leve y Fagot (2001) replican el modelo Coercitivo de Patterson. Sus resultados muestran que los datos se ajustan al modelo de forma similar tanto en chicos como en chicas y, consecuentemente, los procesos de coerción se aplican similarmente a ambos sexos. ...

Coercive family processes: A replication and extension of Patterson’s coercion model
  • Citing Article
  • January 2001

Aggressive Behavior

... Ketika seorang anak laki-laki suka bermain dengan boneka, ia masih terkungkung oleh kepercayaan "boneka hanya untuk anak perempuan". Ini terkait dengan apa yang dilaporkan Fagot (1995) bahwa ibu dan ayah memperlakukan anak laki-laki dan perempuan secara berbeda. Orang tua pada umumnya memilih membeli mainan terkait jenis kelamin yang berbeda untuk putra dan putri mereka. ...

Psychosocial and Cognitive Determinants of Early Gender-Role Development
  • Citing Article
  • January 1995

Annual Review of Sex Research

... Pour Eisenberg, Murray, and Hite (1982), ces différences d'intérêt genrées pourraient être liées à la fonction, à l'utilisation de ces jouets. Ainsi ces jouets stéréotypés seraient associés à des activités qui influencent le développement de compétences cognitives sexuées, les poupées stimulant par exemple les comportements de soin et de maternage (Connor & Serbin, 1977;Fagot & Littman, 1976 ;Robert & Heroux, 2004 ;Serbin & Connor, 1979 ;Voyer, Nolan, & Voyer, 2000), le développement de traits de personnalité sexués (Eisenberg, Murray, & Hite, 1982) ainsi que le développement de patterns d'interactions sociales entre adultes (Maccoby, 1998). Serbin et al. ...

Relation of Preschool Sex-Typing to Intellectual Performance in Elementary School
  • Citing Article
  • December 1976

Psychological Reports

... However, study results may not generalize to samples who have committed more serious criminal behavior or to community samples. Notably, there may be a greater range of betweenindividual differences in parental monitoring that is not captured in the current sample due to the overall greater level of family dysfunction in high-risk samples (Fisher et al., 1998). Without properly accounting for between-individual variation in parental monitoring, it is difficult to conclude how parental monitoring may function over time in a wide variety of samples. ...

Assessment of Family Stress across Low-, Medium-, and High-Risk Samples Using the Family Events Checklist
  • Citing Article
  • July 1998

Family Relations

... A secure attachment is also associated with better syntax development (90) and overall communication (89,94). On the contrary, maltreating caregivers interact less, ignore their children more, react infrequently when their children talk, and use less diverse vocabulary and syntactic structures during communication (95)(96)(97). These children, in turn, demonstrate delays in syntactic development, reduced vocabulary, poor auditory comprehension skills and pragmatic impairments (98)(99)(100). ...

Interactions Between Children and Abusive Versus Control Parents
  • Citing Article
  • June 1988

Journal of Clinical Child Psychology

... Taylor et al. (2013) found that, when comparing the color preferences of British adults with those of Himba adults (a nonindustrialized population in rural Namibia), gender-typed pink-blue preferences are not universal and are based on culture. Thus, young children may establish gender-based knowledge on abstract attributes, such as color, as they gradually interact with the world around them (Leinbach et al., 1997;Yeung & Wong, 2018). It is interesting that even if children's responses are gender-neutral, some drawings show stereotyped aesthetics. ...

Bears are for boys: Metaphorical associations in young children's gender stereotypes
  • Citing Article
  • March 1997

Cognitive Development

... These results are also consistent with former findings that girls are (already) more open-minded about a greater variety of different sex roles and therefore more willing to take over non-traditional roles (see Cramer & Skidd, 1992;Kasten, 1986). In general, the male sex role is more rigidly defined than the traditional female role (Burge, 1981;Fagot & Littman, 1975;Freeman, 2007) and also enjoys a higher status (Helwig, 1998). Thus, boys might receive more negative reinforcement by caregivers and even peers for showing non-traditional behavior (Morrow, 2006). ...

Stability of Sex Role and Play Interests from Preschool to Elementary School
  • Citing Article
  • March 1975