Two cultural models on infant motor development: Middle class parents in Israel and the Netherlands
Publication year
2020Number of pages
15 p.
Source
Frontiers in Psychology, 11, (2020), article 119ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ BSI FGW
Journal title
Frontiers in Psychology
Volume
vol. 11
Languages used
English (eng)
Subject
Developing normativity in educationAbstract
Culture influences the way parents shape children's environment. Two studies examined cross-cultural differences in parental practices related to motor development in Israel and the Netherlands. In the first study, 198 Dutch and 206 Israeli parents of infants aged 1-7.5 months completed questionnaires measuring parental practices and beliefs regarding motor development. In the second study, 30 Dutch and 30 Israeli parents completed the same questionnaires when their children were 2 and 10 months old. While similarities were found across the cultures, Israeli parents practiced infant prone positioning more. Additionally, Dutch infants spent substantial more time in the playpen. Furthermore, beliefs stressing stimulation and stimulating practices (both more frequent within Israeli parents) predicted better prone skills, shown by the Israeli infants. Findings highlight the diversity of parental practices related to infant motor development.
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- Academic publications [226841]
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- Faculty of Social Sciences [28468]
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