HMS 313 CONTENT QUIZ #2
situational disappointment
"I'm disappointed you didn't do your part in helping out last night."
enduring disappointment
"We ask you to do one little thing to help out and you always seem to find a way to screw up everything in the house."
motherese
"baby-talk"
familism:
"core values such as strong family identification, attachment, mutual support, family obligation, and familial inter connectedness." promotes a wide extended family network.
leaving home stage
...cycle continues
A husband tells his wife she needs to stop buying so much on the credit cards. She responds by saying he needs to stop buying so many video games. This is an example of what?
cross-complaining
loyal siblings
cultural norms, support each other in times of crisis, family events. regular but not frequent contact.
permanent stressors:
death of a family member is permanent.
Research shows that marital satisfaction _______ after the birth of the first child.
declines
Sisters Lisa and Laura both like music. Older sister, Lisa, excels in piano. When Laura was given am opportunity to choose an instrument to play, she purposefully chose a guitar to be different from her sister. What is Laura's decision exemplifying?
deidentification
family stressors
discrete life events or transitions that have an impact upon the family unit and produce, or have the potential to produce, change in the family social system.
supportive:
do not enter a role of authority or discipline, sees them often but not as frequent as influential.
non normative stressors
do not follow a predicatable cycle through critical family transitions, not predictably found during a particular time
avoidance
doesn't communicate disappointment, usually hears it from someone else.
According to socioemotional selectivity theory, which social motive is highest among people in old age or those with limited time left to live?
emotion regulation
substitution
employ indirect methods to solve a problem
machoism:
encourages a view of men as the dominant head of the house.
firm control
encourages children to learn how to improve their behavior without placing blame on the individual.
temporary stressors:
eventually passes
hostile siblings
exhibit negative feelings toward each other in the form of envy, negative affect and resentment. preoccupied with the negative state of the relationship.
socioemotional selectivity theory
explains the reasons why age may affect our relationships with extended family; time changes one's perspective.
crisis phase:
families are dealing with demands for which their current interaction patterns and capabilities are not adequate.
stressor pileup:
families often do not have stressors in isolation from one another.
Managing increased parent-child conflict and refocusing on the middle stage of marriage are fundamental tasks at which stage of the family life cycle?
families with adolescents
The two most common topics of conversation for grandparents and grandchildren are education and ________.
family
families with adolescents stage
family adjusts relationships with children to allow for autonomy, manage parent-child conflicts, refocus on the middle stage of the parents' marriage, provide care for elderly parents
communication about the stressor:
family members must discuss the details of how the problem happened, what they think can be done to address it, and how it will affect the family.
The idea that social support mitigates the ill effects of stress by reducing the appraised threat and reducing the stress response that typically follows the treat is know as the ______________ model of social support.
family perception
perceptions:
family's perception at the initial stressor event as well as the stress/crisis produced by event, and stress pileup that follows.
later life stage
find ways to maintain couple interests in the face of physical decline, continue coping with death and disability of elderly family members including spouse and siblings
communication predicament of aging (CPA) model:
focuses on the negative stereotypes that younger people may hold of older adults. this makes them over accommodate their communication in ways that are often demeaning to the adult.
normative stressors
follow a somewhat predictable cycle through critical family transitions
neugarten & weinstein's 5 types of grandparents
formal style fun-seeker surrogate parent reservoir of family wisdom distant figure
leaving home stage
fundamentals tasks involve redefining relationships so that children are less dependent upon their parents, developing their own identity
According to the Double ABC-X Model of Family Stress, certain stressful events can bring on additional stressors. This common phenomenon is known as stress _________.
generation effect
voluntary stressors:
getting married.
inter generational stake hypothesis:
grand parents will have a higher stake in their relationship with their grand children and perceive it to be more important and closer than the grand child.
control messages
has to do with a child's behavior.
distant figure:
have little or no contact with the GC. usually fleeting appearances or holidays.
fun-seeker:
have the view that the GP-GC relationship should be one of pleasure and fun.
authoritarian
high amounts of control, not a whole lot of wamrth.
congenial siblings
highly affectionate and close by places more value on marital and child relationships.
intimate siblings
highly devoted and psychologically close to one another. high affection, acceptance, self-disclosure, intimacy. takes priority over most relationships.
A new spouse often begins to feel accepted by his or her in-laws once they become part of the shared family _______.
identity
stressful events:
impact adaptive processes, usually in a negative way.
empty nest syndrome
includes symptoms like depression and loneliness after children leave home
enduring vulnerabilities:
influence adaptive processes and the experience of stressful events.
adaptive processes:
influences the likelihood of stress pileup.
Cherlin & Furstenberg (1985 & 1986); Mueller, Wilhem, & Elder (2002):
influential supportive passive authority-oriented detached
As soon as a young child has trouble reading a children's book, his mother takes over and reads the rest of the book. This mother is exhibiting parental __________.
intrusion (?)
eight basic strategies to cope with stress:
mapping avoidance help-seeking minimization reversal blame substitution improving shortcomings coaching modeling communal coping communal coping orientation communication about the stressor cooperative action
spillover hypothesis
marital issues "spillover" to create parent-child disharmony, or vice versa
family life changes:
marriage of a family member, sending another to college.
The matrifocal tilt explains that extended family ties on the ________ side of the family tend to be stronger.
maternal
hollow warmth messages
messages that are given even when they aren't deserved.
warmth messages
messages that make a child feel safe, loved, cared for, and supported.
passive:
mildly to moderately involved, don't provide much support.
According to our text, two of the main reasons families are separated are what?
military duty and incarceration in jail or prison
optimism bias
most people are generally positive about marriages and their lives. this can be good and a bad thing for marriage.
communication about the stressor
must discuss how the problem happened, what can be done, and how it will affect the family
apathetic siblings
mutually disinterested in one another and see little each other because their lives have gone in different directions. NOT hostile or rivalrous.
deviance training
observing an older sibling break a rule or engage in risky behavior can normalize that behavior and essentially show a younger sibling how its done.
launching
occurs when a child leaves the home of their family of origin
boundary ambiguity:
occurs when family members are unsure who is in and who is out of the family system and who occupies what roles.
Two major dimensions of parenting that have a strong association with child outcomes are warmth and _______ messages.
Control
modeling
children will pick up behaviors by observing their parents enact those behaviors, especially when they are positive outcomes connected to the coping behaviors.
reciprocal sibling relationships
close in age and tend to interact like peers and are similar in developmental stages and interests.
normative family stressors:
come with changes in family life and usually come with the passage of time.
What are the components of communal coping?
communal coping orientation, communication about the stressor, cooperative action
in-laws
communicated support expressed family inclusion showed respect for their differing views appropriately self-disclosed
laissez-faire
accept and listen to their child's emotion, but they fail to follow up by helping the child set limits on behavior.
reversal
act the opposite of how they feel
launching children stage
adjust back to being a marital dyad, form relationships with their adult children
chaotic (dis)association:
adult children attempt to "give their parent another chance" only to be reminded of the reasons for estrangement.
high conversation orientation
allows children to be expressive about their feelings.
Sibling commitment (i.e. psychological attachment) ___________________________ over the life span.
appears to persist at fairly stable levels
help-seeking
asking for help from family members, neighbors, coworkers, or experts
secondary appraisal
assessment of coping resources for dealing with those stressors
The Jones family is feeling stressed out by their economic struggles as Mr. Jones was recently laid off from his jon. The family decided to cope by going on a camping trip. This response is an example of which family coping strategy?
avoidance
consequences of family coping:
bring on additional stressors (missing work, drinking alcohol).
level 2 stress:
cope by making fundamental changes.
level 1 stress:
cope by making specific superficial changes.
mapping
coping to trying to obtain more information about the problem
marital quality:
couple's overall evaluation of and satisfaction with their marriage.
coaching
parents directly instruct their children how to cope with stressful situation
emotional dismissing
parents feel that their child's negative emotion is trivial and harmful. tires to distract the child by ignoring or minimizing the emotion.
authoritative
parents that are firm but warm. give and take relationships.
off-time grand parenthood:
people experience the role of grand parenthood earlier or later than they expected. can lead the GP's feeling deviant, isolated, or lacking in social support.
fictive siblings
people who have been labeled as siblings due to affection or custom though there is no biological or legal connection
common ingroup identity model:
people who share a larger common identity may overlook other potentially negative or stereotypical aspects of a person's identity.
influential:
physically present and involved in GC lives weekly and sometimes daily basis.
resource dilution hypothesis
positive parenting resources and behaviors can decrease with the addition of a sibling.
According to Gottman, "statements of understanding should ________ 'statements of advice'".
precede
the directive style
relies on firm control and is more similar to the authoritative style.
Late-life siblings relationships are characterized by sharing memories and ____________.
reminiscing
avoidance
removing family members from situation that produce the stressor.
reservoir of family wisdom:
represents an authoritative figure with traditional power.
A married couple has four children. They find it difficult to pay for all the children's college and are challenged to find one-on-one time with each child. What hypothesis is this?
resource dilution hypothesis
resource reallocation
resources are not diluted, but instead reallocated when a sibling is born.
filial responsibility:
responsibility for parents exercised by children.
nonverbal strategies
sends the messages with body language
extended family
social relationships among those related by blood, law, or self-ascribed associated that extends beyond the marriage or committed partner couple and the immediate family of parenting adults and depended children.
buffering model
social support lessens the negative effects of stress and supportive communication helps to work through their emotions and minimize stress.
marianismo:
socializes women to be submissive, feminine, pure, and sacrifice for the family.
When parents are not getting along in their marriage, it is often the case that the parent and the child are also not getting along well. This is known as the _________ hypothesis.
spillover
adjustment phase:
stable patterns of family interactions where new family demands are met with avoidance, elimination, or assimilation.
surrogate parent:
takes on the parenting role and may even substitute for a child's parent.
According to research, what role do maternal aunts provide to nieces and nephews?
teacher, role model, confidante, savvy peer, and second mother
direct verbal strategies
tells everything directly
morphostasis
tendency to remain at a steady state or follow the status quo
regenerative power:
the ability to bounce back from a crisis.
vulnerability:
the ability to prevent stressors from creating a crisis situation.
communal coping
the act of family members coping together as a unit
primary appraisal
the assessment of stressors and the degree to which they are threatening
communal coping orientation:
the belief that the family must join together in order to effectively address the problem.
meanings:
the combination of demands and capabilities influence the meaning they assign to the situation.
wife demand/husband withdrawal
the desire for change might be over a couple-level issue that will occasionally put both spouses in the demanding role, with the attendant partner withdrawal.
emotion regulation:
the desire for emotional comfort and gratification.
synchrony
the desire to focus on the relationship and engage the infant.
marital stability:
the duration of the marriage or whether the couple stays together.
emotion-disapproving
the express even more negative attitudes than emotion dismissing parents. sometimes criticizing or reprimanding the emotions.
level 3 stress:
the fabric of the family is in trouble; basic philosophy must be reexamined.
communal coping orientation
the family join together to effectively address the problem.
cooperative action:
the family members collaborate to develop strategies and enact remedies to deal with the stressor.
joining families through marriage stage
the family must negotiate expectations for marriage, spouses have to re calibrate idealized feelings toward their partners, and negotiate and reconstruct their social networks
scapegoating
the parent focuses on the child's fault and problem as a distraction or outlet for his/her own problems. some children may also be pulled into marital conflict.
sibling deidentification
the process in which individuals attempt to develop a unique identity from their siblings either consciously or unconsciously.
new and existing resources:
the resources that are available at the time of the stressor and coping resources.
social captial
the resources that people acquire through their relationships.
family stress
the response of the family to the stressor.
morphogenesis
the tendency of a family to develop and change over time
grand family:
there was not parent present at all - just a grand parents and grand children.
complementary sibling relationships
these have a larger age difference (4 or more years) and at different developmental stages.
adaptation phase:
they work to restore balance to their system where they restore balance to their system so that their capabilities meet their levels of demands.
primary factors of dealing with death
timing and concurrent stressors in the family life cycle function and position of the person prior to his or her death conflicted relationships with the deceased
critical transition hypothesis
transitions cause stress
fictive kin:
treated as relatives though they are not related by blood or law.
blame
try to make themselves feel better by assigning the problem to other people or external factors
enmeshed
unable to separate from
involuntary stressors:
unplanned pregnancy.
permissive
warm and nurturing, but lack in control.
capabilities:
what the family has (resources) and what the family does (coping behaviors). communication is an important family resource.
family to work conflict (FWC)
when conflicts at home impact job performance
work to family (WFC)
when stress from the job spills over into the family
reciprocal responsiveness
when they respond to a smile with increased words and gestures.
cooperative action
where family members collaborate to develop strategies and remedies for the problem
inter group contact theory:
your own contact with a group influences the way you perceive other people in the group. positive experiences with your grand parents will likely give you more positive thoughts about older adults (vice versa).
communication accommodation theory/social identity theory:
your social identity is shaped by the ways you interact with others and the groups you belong to. people perceive you based on the groups you are apart of.
The __________ model states that young people have negative stereotypes of older adults, and then over accommodate their speech in patronizing ways by simplifying speech, increasing volume, or using secondary baby talk.
CPA (communication predicament of aging)
According to Fingerman et al. (2009) once children become young adults and launch from home, how often do their parents provide emotional support?
Parents are more inclined to provide emotional support to successful children.
continuous estrangement:
a choice made by adult children who choose to resist pressures of reconciliation with parents (?)
cross-complaining
a complain from one spouse is met with a complain from the other spouse as a sign of marital distress
informational support
a family member gives advice and feedback
emotional support:
a family member is available to discuss problems, concerns, and feelings.
instrumental support:
a family member provides assistance with tasks
compensatory hypothesis
a poor marital relationship prompts a stronger parent-child relationship, or vice versa
self-concept:
a third social goal that encourages people to consider their place in the social world, how they compare with other people, and how people view them. peaks in adolescence.
improving shortcomings
carefully consider how they contributed to the stressor and improve aspects of their lives ro deal with the stressor and prevent it from happening again.
main effect model:
caring relationships are generally a course of positive eaffect, self-worth, and belonging.
initial stressor event:
causes crisis (family member gets sick)
intergenerational
children are born dependent upon their parents.
indirect verbal strategies
makes little comments
matrifocal tilit
it is often the women doing the engaging with extended family that families are more likely to stay in contact with the extended family on the woman's side of the family.
communication accommodation theory:
language and behaviors offer clues about another person's social groups and status.
detached:
least involved in GC's lives, little interaction and share few activities.
authority-oriented:
less involved in social activities, sees themselves as authority figures and to enforce discipline.
After losing their son in a school shooting spree, a family began to carefully examine their most basic philosophy and orientation to life. This family is most likely experiencing what type of stressor?
level 3 stress
demands:
life events that occur at a particular point in time (stressors) or a lasting condition or felt tension that is accompanied by a desire to change something (strain). these demands can pileup.
neglectful
low both in nurture and demand, detached.
Research shows that for children who have experienced parental divorce, close grandparent-grandchild relationships ________ emotional and behavioral problems.
lower
formal style:
maintain a clear line between parents and grandparents.
families with young children phase
primary task is child rearing and socialization
information seeking:
prompts people to seek out contact with people who are the best sources, even if those people are unfamiliar.
minimization
psychologically reducing the importance of the stressor
non-normative family stressors:
random and don't occur in every family. this randomness usually makes the stress more traumatic for families.
scaffolding
refers to intentionally structuring an event to enhance the child's learning.
verbal sensitivity
refers to the ability of the caregiver to respond in age appropriate ways to the child to help soothe and problem solve with the child.