Abstract
This study examined the role of parents acting as a social influence on adolescents’self-knowledge about competence at academic activities. The participants were adolescent boys and girls (N = 115) between the ages of 11 to 16 and their mothers and fathers. A proposed model of parental perceptions as mediating influences of past performances on adolescents’self-perceptions was evaluated for variations in content and social context. Adolescent self-disclosure to parents about academic achievement was also explored. Results indicated that parent-adolescent agreement was stronger with mothers than fathers and for aspects of self-knowledge that make direct inferences about abilities (performance, talent) rather than indirect inferences (effort, task difficulty) in both Mathematics and English. Results were similar in coed and single-sex contexts. Adolescent self-disclosure to parents suggested an important addition to the model of family influences on the adolescents’sense of academic achievement.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
12 articles.
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