Abstract

ABSTRACT Participants (N = 226; M age = 27.2) completed questionnaires about their care history, attitudes toward non-parental care and maternal employment, their preference for working from home, and demographic characteristics. Overall, attitudes toward non-parental care and maternal employment skewed in a positive direction. More time spent in non-parental care in childhood predicted a higher degree of openness to placing future children in non-parental care. Participants showed a preference for the type of childcare they experienced as children. Female participants with a history of non-parental childcare reported significantly more positive attitudes toward non-parental care. Gender, but not history of care, predicted attitudes toward maternal employment, with females reporting significantly more positive attitudes toward maternal employment than males. A negative correlation was observed between preference for working from home and non-parental care openness. Trait agreeableness positively correlated with attitudes toward daycare and maternal employment.

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