Abstracts Sociology

Add abstract

Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!

Search abstract

Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution

Share this abstract

Did the COVID-19 Pandemic Make Better Parents? A Qualitative Exploration of Parents' Experiences during an Historic Period

by He Xiao

Institution: University of North Texas
Department:
Degree:
Year: 2022
Keywords: parenting under COVID-19; parental betterment; parental responses; parental changes; phenomenological study; thematic analysis; Sociology, Individual and Family Studies
Posted: 3/25/2025
Record ID: 2307867
Full text PDF: https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2048685/


Abstract

Predicated on the literature, parenting practices are subject to change following high-impact events. This understandably applies to the COVID-19 pandemic, a calamity of sheer magnitude. Despite the presence of maladaptive parenting behaviors in the pandemic, upsides (e.g., compassionate parenting practices, strengthened child-parent bond) did transpire as well. The present study is focused on whether and how parental betterment occurred and unfolded during the pandemic. The explicit research goal is to elucidate what positive parental responses and changes were and what drove those responses and changes. The study employed the phenomenological study to make a fine-grained inquiry into the researched phenomenon. Fourteen parents of varying demographic characteristics constituted the sample. One-on-one semi-structured interviews were conducted over Zoom for data collection. Thematic analysis was performed to code the data. I eventually constructed four themes: (1) targeted parental responses and changes, (2) refined parenting skills and practices, (3) heightened understanding of children and parenting, and (4) unsettled parenting styles. Each theme reflects a critical facet of the parenting experiences during the pandemic. In the discussion, effort is invested in parsing out what could elevate the quality of parental responses and what may contribute to the positive parental changes, as well as in pointing out implications for parents, community stakeholders, and family science scholars. It is of centrality to validate and invigorate parents to hold onto the gains from the COVID-19 pandemic to face the growing precarity in today's economic and sociopolitical milieus.

Add abstract

Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!

Search abstract

Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution

Share this abstract

Relevant publications

Book cover thumbnail image
With and Without the White Coat The Racialization of Southern California's Indian ...
by Murti, Lata
   
Book cover thumbnail image
The Filipina-South Floridian International Interne... Agency, Culture, and Paradox
by Haley, Pamela S.
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Mentoring and Women's Advancement to Leadership in... A Qualitative Case Study
by Reid, Marcia V.
   
Book cover thumbnail image
The Coordinated Management of a Culturally Diffuse... Internationally Adopted People and the Narrative B...
by Leinaweaver, Jeffrey J.
   
Book cover thumbnail image
The Lunisolar Calendar A Sociology of Japanese Time
by Cork, Jessica Kennett
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Between Ideals and Realities Elucidating the Role of the Media in Promoting Hum...
by Wolfermann, Gitanjali
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Supersizing Science On Building Large-Scale Research Projects in Biolo...
by Vermeulen, Niki
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Racial and Cultural Otherness The Lived Experience of Americans of Korean Descen...
by Mullin-Jackson, Angela