The Becoming a Family Project is a longitudinal research and clinical intervention study of couple relationships during family formation. The study has three central objective: (1) To examine the impact of a first child on couple relationships during the transition to first-time parenthood; (2) To evaluate a preventive intervention designed to facilitate couple adaptation to become a family; and (3) To describe the impact of couple relationship quality on the development and mental health of the young child. We have been following 96 couples: 72 were interviewed and assessed in late pregnancy and again 6 and 18 months postpartum; 24 similar couples not yet decided about having children were assessed over a similar period. We are now in the final year of a three-year renewal period (1982-85), assessing the couple, the child, and parent-child relationships at 42 months postpartum. This application requests renewed support for the years 1986-1989 to follow the families again when the children have entered elementary school. With pre-birth data describing both parents and the marriage, we can flesh out our investigation of the bi-directional influences of parents and children on each other's satisfaction, adaptation, and dysfunction. Within our central concern about the connection between couple relationships and child development, there are 3 related aims of the current proposal, each representing a logical extension of work completed or in progress: 1) To test our model describing the impact of couple relationship quality on child development at a later point in family life; 2) To test hypotheses about the reciprocal links between the family's impact on the child's adaptation to kindergarten and the impact of the transition on the family; and 3) To provide a critical test of our preventive intervention by examining whether the early positive effects are still operative during a new major family transition. Our emphasis on assessment of the family during periods of transition reflects a method of focusing on coping at times of disequilibration in order to understand family processes associated with development and mental health in adults and children.
Showing the most recent 10 out of 16 publications