Chapter Seven: Family Relationships - Key Terms Flashcards
(34 cards)
Attachment theory
Theory originally developed by British psychiatrist John Bowlby, asserting that, among humans as among other primates, attachments between parents and children have an evolutionary basis in the need for vulnerable young members of the species to stay in close proximity to adults who will care for and protect them.
Authoritarian parents
Parenting style in which parents are high in demandingness but low in responsiveness; they require obedience from their children and punish disobedience without compromise, but show little warmth or affection toward them.
Authoritative parents
A parenting style in which parents are high in demandingness and high in responsiveness; they love their children but also set clear standards for behavior and explain to their children the reasons for those standards.
Autonomy
The quality of being independent and self-sufficient, capable of thinking for one’s self.
bidirectional effects
In relations between parents and children, the concept that children not only are affected by their parents but affect their parents in return. Also called reciprocal effects.
buddy relationship
Between siblings, a relationship in which they treat each other as friends.
caregiver relationship
Between siblings, a relationship in which one sibling serves parental functions for the other.
Casual relationship
Between siblings, a relationship that is not emotionally intense, in which they have little to do with one another.
Critical relationship
Between siblings, a relationship characterized by a high level of conflict and teasing.
custodial parent
The parent who lives in the same household as the children following a divorce.
demandingness
The degree to which parents set down rules and expectations for behaviour and require their children to comply with them.
differential parenting
When parents’ behavior differs toward siblings within the same family.
disengaged parents
Parenting style in which parents are low in both demandingness and responsiveness and relatively uninvolved in their children’s development.
disequilibrium
In the family systems approach, this term is used in reference to a change that requires adjustments from family members.
divorce mediation
An arrangement in which a professional mediator helps divorcing parents negotiate an agreement that both will find acceptable.
dual-earner family
A family in which both parents are employed.
dyadic relationship
A relationship between two persons.
familismo
Concept of family life characteristic of Latino cultures that emphasizes the love, closeness, and mutual obligations of family life.
family process
The quality of relationships among family members.
family structure
The outward characteristics of a family, such as whether or not the parents are married.
family systems approach
An approach to understanding family functioning that emphasizes how each relationship within the family influences the family as a whole.
insecure attachment
Type of attachment to caregiver in which infants are timid about exploring the environment and resist or avoid the caregiver when she attempts to offer comfort or consolation.
internal working model
In attachment theory, the term for the cognitive framework, based on interactions in infancy with the primary caregiver, that shapes expectations and interactions in relationships to others throughout life.
midlife crisis
The popular belief, largely unfounded according to research, that most people experience a crisis when they reach about age 40, involving intensive reexamination of their lives and perhaps sudden and dramatic changes if they are dissatisfied.