


Hello and welcome to the Your Parenting Mojo podcast. European Journal of Developmental Psychology 7(3), 350-370. Preschool girls’ distress and mothers’ sensitivity in Japan and Germany. Neuroendocrinology of parental response to baby-cry. Early Childhood Research Quarterly 30(A), 70-79. Executive functioning and school adjustment: The mediational role of pre-kindergarten learning-related behaviors. Sasser, T.R., Bierman, K.L., & Heinrichs, B. Developmental differences in the understanding of and reaction to others’ inhibition of emotional expression. Roemer, L., Williston, S.K., & Rollins, L.G. Journal of Family Psychology 31(7), 922-932. Patterns of interparental conflict, parenting, and children’s emotional insecurity: A person-centered approach. Kopystynska, O., Paschall, K.W., Barnett, M.A., & Curran, M.A. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 32(4), 409-423. Predicting kindergarten peer social status from toddler and preschool problem behavior. Clinical Child & Family Psychology Review 12, 255-270. A model of mindful parenting: Implications for parent-child relationships and prevention research. Retrieved from Duncan, L.G., Coatsworth, J.D., & Greenberg, M.T. Psychology is WEIRD: Western college students are not the best representatives of human emotion, behavior, and sexuality. How divorce impacts children’s developmentīrookshire, B. How parenting affects children’s development Let me know (via email or the Contact Me, page – not the comments on this episode because I get inundated with spam) what you think…
WEIRD WEST PARENTING TRIAL
This to-the-point episode is a trial of a shorter form of episode after listeners told me this show is “very dense.” It’s hard to back off the density, but I can back off the length.
WEIRD WEST PARENTING HOW TO
It turns out that this question is related to a skill that psychologists call emotional regulation, and learning how to regulate emotions is one of the most important tasks of childhood. Often it does make the child stop crying…but doesn’t it invalidate the child’s feelings?” “I hear parents on the playground all the time saying “You’re OK!” after their child falls over.
