• Title of article

    Effects of Parenting and Deviant Peers on Early to Mid-Adolescent Conduct Problems

  • Author/Authors

    Linda Trudeau &W. Alex Mason، نويسنده , , G. Kevin Randall & Richard Spoth، نويسنده , , Ekaterina Ralston، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    1249
  • To page
    1264
  • Abstract
    We investigated the influence of effective parenting behaviors (father and mother reports) and deviant peer association (adolescent reports) on subsequent young adolescent conduct problems (teacher reports) during grades 7–9, using structural equation modeling. Data were from a sample of 226 rural adolescents (n0112 boys; n0107 girls; n07 gender unknown), their parents, and teachers. Both effective parenting and association with deviant peers influenced later conduct problems; however, the pattern of influence varied across time and between fathers and mothers, with complex patterns of interactions between effective parenting and peer deviance. From seventh to eighth grade, effective parenting by both mothers and fathers buffered the effect of higher levels of peer deviance on conduct problems across adolescent gender. From eighth to ninth grade (i.e., transition into high school), fathers’ effective parenting buffered the effects of deviant peer association on their daughters’ conduct problems, whereas both fathers’ and mothers’ influence was stronger for sons when deviant peer associations were lower. Analyses also evaluated bi-directional longitudinal effects among adolescents, parents, and peers. Although varying by parent and adolescent gender or adolescent age, results generally supported the protective effects of parenting on their children’s conduct problems during early to mid adolescence
  • Keywords
    Effective parenting . Peer deviance . Adolescentconduct problems . Buffering effects . Bi-directional effects
  • Journal title
    Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
  • Record number

    829376