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The Effect of Parenting Practices and Family Adjustment of Caregivers on Early Childhood Development in Rural China
  • +2
  • Qiannan Song,
  • Yali Zhang,
  • Wenting Zheng,
  • Ai Yue,
  • Na Qiao
Qiannan Song
Shaanxi Normal University
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Yali Zhang
Shaanxi Normal University
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Wenting Zheng
Shaanxi Normal University
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Ai Yue
Shaanxi Normal University
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Na Qiao
Shaanxi Normal University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

We used a unique panel dataset of 1682 children from villages in Northwest China. Our objective was to estimate the impact of parenting practices and family adjustment on early childhood development among infants aged 5 to 24 months. Within this cohort, an alarming 53.58% of children exhibited susceptibility to cognitive development delays. Additionally, 60.02%, 36.24%, and 40.11% were at risk of language, motor, and social-emotional delays, respectively. Moreover, parental consistency, coercive parenting and the parental adjustment of caregivers were relatively poor. Multivariate analysis revealed that total parenting practices and family adjustment had significant positive effects on all dimensions of early childhood development, including the cognitive, language, motor, and social-emotional dimensions; parenting practices had the strongest relationship with all dimensions of child development; and family adjustment had a significant positive predictive function only for social-emotional development.
20 Oct 2023Submitted to Infant and Child Development: prenatal, childhood, adolescence, emerging adulthood
20 Oct 2023Submission Checks Completed
20 Oct 2023Assigned to Editor
12 Apr 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
23 Apr 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending