TY - JOUR
T1 - Father’s Engagement in Direct Care Is Associated With Children’s Social Competence for Preschool Boys but Not Girls in Peru
AU - Nóblega, Magaly
AU - Monteiro, Lígia
AU - Santos, Carolina
AU - Diniz, Eva
AU - Guimet, Marisut
AU - Ugarte, Andrea
AU - Marinelli, Francesco
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Psychological Association
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Evidence shows that fathers have an important role in child development, but few studies explore this influence in the Latin American context. This study aimed to contribute to bridge this gap by analyzing in a Peruvian urban, mainly middle socioeconomic sample, the associations between different dimensions of father engagement (i.e., interaction in direct care, teaching/discipline, and play activities) and children’s social adjustment (i.e., social competence, anxiety-withdrawal and anger-aggression) during the preschool years, while controlling for child’s age and parents’ education, and testing the interaction effects between father’s engagement and child’s gender. Two hundred three 2-parent families with preschool children (M = 52.82, SD = 10.06; 57.63% were girls) participated in the study. Multiple ordinary least squares regression models were conducted. Only for social competence, an interaction between father’s engagement in direct care and child’s gender (boys) was found. These results contribute to highlight the importance of fathers in domains traditionally associated with mothers in a Latin American context.
AB - Evidence shows that fathers have an important role in child development, but few studies explore this influence in the Latin American context. This study aimed to contribute to bridge this gap by analyzing in a Peruvian urban, mainly middle socioeconomic sample, the associations between different dimensions of father engagement (i.e., interaction in direct care, teaching/discipline, and play activities) and children’s social adjustment (i.e., social competence, anxiety-withdrawal and anger-aggression) during the preschool years, while controlling for child’s age and parents’ education, and testing the interaction effects between father’s engagement and child’s gender. Two hundred three 2-parent families with preschool children (M = 52.82, SD = 10.06; 57.63% were girls) participated in the study. Multiple ordinary least squares regression models were conducted. Only for social competence, an interaction between father’s engagement in direct care and child’s gender (boys) was found. These results contribute to highlight the importance of fathers in domains traditionally associated with mothers in a Latin American context.
KW - Peru
KW - child’s gender
KW - fathers’ engagement
KW - preschool
KW - social adjustment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85188684231&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1037/men0000466
DO - 10.1037/men0000466
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85188684231
SN - 1524-9220
JO - Psychology of Men and Masculinity
JF - Psychology of Men and Masculinity
ER -