ABSTRACT

Socioeconomic Status, Parenting, and Child Development presents cutting-edge thinking and research on linkages among socioeconomic status, parenting, and child development. The contributors represent an array of different disciplines, and approach the issues from a variety of perspectives. Accordingly, their "take" on how SES matters in the lives of children varies.

This volume is divided into two parts. Part I concerns the constructs and measurement of SES and Part II discusses the functions and effects of SES. Each part presents four substantive chapters on the topic followed by an interpretive and constructively critical commentary.

The chapters--considered as a whole--attest to the value of systematically examining the components of SES and how each flows through an array of specific parenting practices and resources both within and outside the home environment to help shape the course of child development. The result is a more fully delineated picture of how SES impacts the lives of children in the 21st century--a picture that contains a road map for the next generation of studies of SES and its role in the rapidly evolving ecology of family life.

chapter |10 pages

Socioeconomic Status, Parenting, and Child Development

An Introduction
ByMarc H. Bornstein, Robert H. Bradley

part I|133 pages

Ses

chapter 1|15 pages

A Decade of Measuring SES

What It Tells Us and Where to go From Here
ByMargaret E. Ensminger, Kate E. Fothergill

chapter 2|54 pages

Socioeconomic Status, Parenting, and Child Development

The Hollingshead Four-Factor Index of Social Status and the Socioeconomic Index of Occupations
ByMarc H. Bornstein, Chun-Shin Hahn, Joan T. D. Suwalsky, O. Maurice Haynes

chapter 3|24 pages

Off With Hollingshead

Socioeconomic Resources, Parenting, and Child Development
ByGreg J. Duncan, Katherine A. Magnuson

chapter 4|18 pages

Socioeconomic Resources, Parenting, and Child Development Among Immigrant Families

ByAndrew J. Fuligni, Hirokazu Yoshikawa

chapter 5|19 pages

Methodological Issues in Studies of SES, Parenting, and Child Development

ByLois Wladis Hoffman

part II|111 pages

Ses

chapter 7|28 pages

Age and Ethnic Variations in Family Process Mediators of SES

ByRobert H. Bradley, Robert F. Corwyn

chapter 8|19 pages

Socioeconomic Status in Children's Development and Family Environment

Infancy Through Adolescence
ByAllen W. Gottfried, Adele E. Gottfried, Kay Bathurst, Diana Wright Guerin, Makeba M. Parramore

chapter 9|22 pages

Moving on Up

Neighborhood Effects on Children and Families
ByTama Leventhal, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn

chapter 10|25 pages

What Are SES Effects Effects of?

A Developmental Systems Perspective
ByRichard M. Lerner