Title of article :
Explanation of normative declines in parentsʹ knowledge about their adolescent children
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
This study aimed to explain why parental knowledge of adolescentsʹ whereabouts declines with age. Such an investigation is important because previous studies have established an association between behavior problems and low levels of parental knowledge. A time-sequential sample comprising 2415 adolescents aged 13–18 years was investigated on five annual occasions. Each year, parental knowledge declined by .10 SD. Adolescentsʹ establishment of a private sphere (less disclosure; defiance) was the most important mediator of age effects on knowledge. Taken together, declining parental control and the establishment of a private sphere explained 37.5% of the age-related decline in knowledge. Parental control was, however, not a significant predictor any longer when disclosure and defiance were controlled for. Results also revealed that some of the mediating variables were stronger in early-to-mid adolescence. Other variables appeared to slow the age-related decline, especially in mid-to-late adolescence. These variables are therefore interpreted as parentsʹ and adolescentsʹ attempts to balance autonomy development and connectedness. If this balancing fails, adolescent behavior problems might arise along with low levels of parental knowledge early on.
Keywords :
Parent child relations , Parent child communication , Parental knowledge , adolescent development , Monitoring , Autonomy development , Childrearing practices
Journal title :
Journal of Adolescence
Journal title :
Journal of Adolescence