ABSTRACT

The primary purpose of this study was to examine the relations of maternal childrearing practices over an 8-year period to adolescents’ sympathy, personal distress, and cognitive perspective-taking. In addition, the relations of maternal empathy-related characteristics to children’s empathy-related characteristics and to their own childrearing practices were assessed. Maternal practices were assessed with a Q-sort on five occasions, each 2 years apart; mothers’ and adolescents’ empathy-related characteristics were assessed when the adolescents were 15 to 16 years old. Mothers’ positive emotional communication and rational independence training were positively correlated with adolescents’ perspective taking, as well as with mothers’ perspective taking. Mothers’ reluctance to discipline was associated with low levels of adolescents’ (particularly girls’) personal distress. In addition, maternal positive emotional communication was associated with high sympathy in girls and low personal distress in boys.