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The Relationship Between Parents’ Use of Verbal and Physical Aggression and Children’s Relational Satisfaction and Closeness With Their Parents

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Abstract:

A two part study was conducted to determine the relationship between parents’ use of verbal and physical aggression (i.e., corporal punishment) and children’s relational satisfaction and closeness with parents. In part one, 151 lower-division undergraduate students completed a survey rating their own verbal aggression, their mother’s and father's verbal aggression and corporal punishment practices, and their relational satisfaction and closeness to each parent. In part two, mail surveys measuring verbal aggression were sent to 280 parents; 67% of parents returned the surveys. The data were largely consistent with the hypotheses. Most notably, there were strong negative correlations between perceived parent verbal aggression and relational satisfaction and closeness in all four instances, and moderate negative correlations between parents’ use of corporal punishment and relational satisfaction and closeness in eight of 12 instances. Further, there were low to moderate positive correlations between perceived parent verbal aggression and corporal punishment in all six instances. Finally, self-report mother verbal aggression was positively related to minor corporal punishment and most severe instance, and negatively related to relational satisfaction. However, there was no relationship between self-report father verbal aggression and any of the dependent variables under investigation. Additional hypotheses and research questions are tested, and results and implications discussed.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

aggress (222), verbal (208), parent (164), relationship (113), use (71), punish (71), corpor (68), relat (62), father (60), communic (57), mother (57), report (56), self (50), student (48), satisfact (46), child (43), infant (40), close (40), j (38), m (37), self-report (37),

Author's Keywords:

Verbal aggression, corporal punishment, relational satisfaction, closeness
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Name: International Communication Association
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http://www.icahdq.org


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MLA Citation:

Roberto, Anthony., Carlyle, Kellie. and McClure, Leola. "The Relationship Between Parents’ Use of Verbal and Physical Aggression and Children’s Relational Satisfaction and Closeness With Their Parents" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Sheraton New York, New York City, NY, <Not Available>. 2009-05-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p14510_index.html>

APA Citation:

Roberto, A. , Carlyle, K. and McClure, L. T. "The Relationship Between Parents’ Use of Verbal and Physical Aggression and Children’s Relational Satisfaction and Closeness With Their Parents" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Sheraton New York, New York City, NY Online <PDF>. 2009-05-25 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p14510_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: A two part study was conducted to determine the relationship between parents’ use of verbal and physical aggression (i.e., corporal punishment) and children’s relational satisfaction and closeness with parents. In part one, 151 lower-division undergraduate students completed a survey rating their own verbal aggression, their mother’s and father's verbal aggression and corporal punishment practices, and their relational satisfaction and closeness to each parent. In part two, mail surveys measuring verbal aggression were sent to 280 parents; 67% of parents returned the surveys. The data were largely consistent with the hypotheses. Most notably, there were strong negative correlations between perceived parent verbal aggression and relational satisfaction and closeness in all four instances, and moderate negative correlations between parents’ use of corporal punishment and relational satisfaction and closeness in eight of 12 instances. Further, there were low to moderate positive correlations between perceived parent verbal aggression and corporal punishment in all six instances. Finally, self-report mother verbal aggression was positively related to minor corporal punishment and most severe instance, and negatively related to relational satisfaction. However, there was no relationship between self-report father verbal aggression and any of the dependent variables under investigation. Additional hypotheses and research questions are tested, and results and implications discussed.

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Document Type: PDF
Page count: 29
Word count: 7229
Text sample:
The Relationship Between Parents’ Use 1 Abstract A two part study was conducted to determine the relationship between parents’ use of verbal and physical aggression (i.e. corporal punishment) and children’s relational satisfaction and closeness with parents. In part one 151 lower-division undergraduate students completed a survey rating their own verbal aggression their mother’s and father's verbal aggression and corporal punishment practices and their relational satisfaction and closeness to each parent. In part two mail surveys measuring verbal aggression were
* * p < .05; ** p < .01; *** p < .001 The Relationship Between Parents’ Use 29 Table 3 Correlations Between Parent Verbal and Physical Aggression Perceived Self-Report Perceived Self-Report Father VA Father VA Mother VA Mother VA Minor corporal punishment .25 (145) *** .07 (78) .29 (146) *** .23 (106) ** Severe corporal punishment .23 (145) ** .09 (77) .35 (146) *** .10 (106) Most severe instance .18 (144) * .03 (78) .26 (146) *** .22


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When the Parent has Cancer: Adult Child Perceptions of Communication Competency, Humor Orientation, and Relational Satisfaction in the Older Adult Parent-Adult Child Relationship

The Development of Physical Aggression and Unintentional Injuries in Relation to Parental and Child's Level of Self-Control in Pre-School Children


 
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