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      A bio-ecological interpretation of the relationship challenges in the context of the reconstituted family

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          Abstract

          From an educational psychology perspective, family life - as a child's primary educational situation - is changing drastically as divorces increase worldwide. Various challenges to relationships accompany the restructuring of family systems after divorce. When remarriage occurs, children's shared membership of two family microsystems and the resultant complexity of the mesosystem cause the reconstituted family situation to come to differ radically from that of a nuclear family. The purpose of this article is to extend Bronfenbrenner's bio-ecological model in order to construct a deeper understanding of the relationship challenges in the context of the reconstituted family, specifically noting the importance of effective parenting at mesosystemic level. Data from two separate qualitative studies was interpreted, based on Bronfenbrenner's bio-ecological model, to form an integrated understanding of the complexity and influence of the mesosystem. The findings indicate that sound proximal interactive processes in the primary and secondary family microsystems depend on an effective mesosystem, and hence, on at least a functionally co-operative relationship between the biological parents after a divorce. Since the biological parents primarily control the effectiveness of the mesosystem, Bronfenbrenner's extended bio-ecological model can be fruitfully applied in all professions dealing with the contextual relationship challenges of reconstituted families.

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          Most cited references28

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          When Children Have Two Mothers: Relationships With Nonresident Mothers, Stepmothers, and Fathers

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            Caught in the middle: Mothers in stepfamilies

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              Children's responses to conflict between their different parents: mothers, stepfathers, nonresident fathers, and nonresident stepmothers.

              Children who have experienced parental separation have potentially 3 sets of parents whose relationships may impact on them: mother and former partner, mother and stepfather, and father and new partner. Children's accounts of their response to conflict between these different parental dyads were studied, in relation to the quality of their relationships with these parents assessed with child interviews and questionnaires, and to maternal reports of the children's adjustment, in a sample of 159 children growing up in different family settings. Involvement in conflict within 1 parental dyad was chiefly unrelated to such involvement in conflict between the other parental dyads. In contrast, there was evidence for "spillover" effects in relationships within families; for instance, high frequencies of conflict between parents were linked to more troubled parent-child relationships. Children were more likely to side with the parent to whom they were biologically related than with stepparents. Involvement in mother-nonresident father conflict and in mother-stepfather conflict were both associated with adjustment problems, independent of the qualities of positivity and conflict in the relationship between child and parent. Implications for views on "family boundaries" are considered.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                saje
                South African Journal of Education
                S. Afr. j. educ.
                Education Association of South Africa (EASA) (Pretoria )
                2076-3433
                May 2015
                : 35
                : 2
                : 01-11
                Affiliations
                [1 ] University of Pretoria
                Article
                S0256-01002015000200016
                10.15700/SAJE.V35N2A1039
                8fdfa818-718b-40b8-863a-e1d24c192aac

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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                SciELO South Africa

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0256-0100&lng=en
                Categories
                Education & Educational Research
                Education, Scientific Disciplines

                Educational research & Statistics,General education
                bio-ecological,divorce,divorced parent(s),reconstituted family

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