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Educational identity and maternal helicopter parenting: Moderation by the perceptions of environmental threat.

Yue WangSkyler Thomas HawkSusan J T Branje
Published in: Journal of research on adolescence : the official journal of the Society for Research on Adolescence (2023)
This four-wave study examined longitudinal associations between maternal helicopter parenting and college students' educational identity processes over 1 year, as well as the moderating effects of mothers' perceived environmental threats (i.e., uncertainty and competition). Participants were 349 first-year university students (39.8% male, M age  = 18.20) and their mothers (M age  = 49.10) in Hong Kong. Latent class growth analysis identified two subgroups based on levels of mothers' threat perceptions (i.e., lower vs. higher). Multi-group random-intercept cross-lagged models found that, at the within-person level, students' reconsideration of educational commitments positively predicted helicopter parenting only for mothers with higher threat perceptions. These findings mainly support youth-driven effects on overbearing parenting behaviors. Mothers' threat perceptions might exacerbate these excessive responses to youth's academic turbulence.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • emergency medical
  • young adults
  • birth weight
  • depressive symptoms
  • human health
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • weight gain
  • weight loss
  • climate change
  • life cycle