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Parental Socialization and Development of Chinese Youths: A Multivariate and Comparative Approach.

Jerf W K YeungEileen Yuk-Ha TsangHui-Fang Chen
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2019)
Parental socialization has been recently reported as a multifaceted concept, which includes parenting practices and family processes. Nevertheless, prior family research generally treated parental socialization tantamount to parenting behavior only and overlooked its different effects on multiple youth outcomes simultaneously, especially in the Chinese population. This study, with a sample of 223 Chinese parent-youth dyads (80.7% mothers; 55.6% male youths; meanage = 16.7 years), found that both authoritative parenting and positive family processes, as measured by a multi-informant approach, significantly predicted higher self-esteem, self-control, future orientation, other perspective taking and lower externalizing problem behavior of Chinese youths concomitantly. Furthermore, youth self-esteem was found to significantly mediate the effects of authoritative parenting and positive family processes on their self-control, future orientation, other perspective taking and externalizing problem behavior, and different facets of parental socialization significantly predicted the youth outcomes differentially. Results of this study highlight importance of considering the multifaceted nature of parental socialization and interrelations of youth development.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • young adults
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • current status
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • adipose tissue
  • skeletal muscle