Laurie Ford’s research while affiliated with University of South Carolina and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Parental Perceptions of Child Development Among Low-Income Mexican American Families
  • Article

December 1998

·

35 Reads

·

41 Citations

·

Laurie Ford

Parents' perceptions of child development are influenced by complex interactions among cultural, social, and economic factors. Insights into how parents from culturally diverse societies perceive the development of their children might explain why different cultural groups foster or value the development of different skills in their children. In this study, we explored the perceptions of child development among low income Mexican American parents. A series of ethnographic interviews were conducted with eight Mexican American families who had preschool children. Qualitative data analyses yielded three main themes that were important to these parents: family attitudes and values, changes, and adaptations. For these parents, the development of social attributes in children, that will enable them to function within their own cultural group, was as important as the development of cognitive or motor skills. Service providers, such as school and mental health personnel, should take into account cultural differences in parents' perceptions of the importance of various developmental milestones for their children when suggesting interventions typically used by parents in the dominant culture.

Citations (1)


... An even smaller body of work has documented that Latine families of preschool children sometimes also adopt US values/beliefs and socialization/parenting goals that are consistent with the mainstream host culture. The most common US value/belief that Latine families report adopting and transmitting to their children starting in early childhood is autonomy (i.e., encouraging children to be independent; Delgado & Ford, 1998) and egalitarian gender roles (i.e., encouraging children to have high aspirations for formal education and teaching them that responsibilities should be shared equally regardless of gender; Vesely et al., 2019). For example, Aldoney & Cabrera (2016) investigated the socialization goals of 30 immigrant, Spanish-speaking parents of children participating in a Head Start center located in Washington DC. ...

Reference:

Parenting while Latine: Bicultural Socialization Values and Practices in Support of Preschool Children’s Well-being
Parental Perceptions of Child Development Among Low-Income Mexican American Families
  • Citing Article
  • December 1998