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Apples and Oranges: Divergent Meanings of Parents' and Adolescents' Perceptions of Parental Influence

NCJ Number
222434
Journal
Journal of Early Adolescence Volume: 28 Issue: 2 Dated: May 2008 Pages: 206-229
Author(s)
Kathleen Boykin McElhaney; Maryfrances R. Porter; L. Wrenn Thompson; Joseph P. Allen
Date Published
May 2008
Length
24 pages
Annotation
This study tested the hypothesis that effective parental influence on adolescent children's behavior stems primarily from the qualities of the parent-adolescent relationship rather than from explicit parental efforts to control adolescents' behaviors.
Abstract
The study found that adolescents who perceived their parents as influencing their behavior reported the primary value of a warm, supportive relationship with their parents, particularly with their mothers. On the other hand, parents who perceived themselves as having an influence on their adolescents' behaviors believed that this influence was based in monitoring their adolescents' behaviors and limiting their freedom of choice about how they spent their time and with whom. Thus, parents gave more value than their adolescent children to the controlling patterns in the parent-adolescent relationship. Based more on adolescents' perceptions of parental influence than parents' own perceptions of their influence, this study concludes that the most effective form of parental influence must include a warm, supportive relationship that motivates the adolescent to comply with restrictions that parents impose. Thus, parents should appreciate that the exercise of control without a warm, supportive relationship with the adolescent may not be positively received by the adolescent. The sample was drawn from a larger longitudinal study of adolescent social development in familial and peer contexts. Participants were 167 seventh and eighth grade students (90 girls and 77 boys) and their parents. They were recruited from a public middle school composed of students from both suburban and urban populations of a city in the southeastern United States. Self-report data were obtained from the adolescents regarding their relationship with their parents or parent with whom they were living. Parents were asked to report on how they believed they influenced their children's behavior. Peer friends were also asked to report on their interactions with the adolescent study participants. 3 tables and 78 references