Literature DB >> 11016567

Parental monitoring: a reinterpretation.

H Stattin1, M Kerr.   

Abstract

Monitoring (tracking and surveillance) of children's behavior is considered an essential parenting skill. Numerous studies show that well-monitored youths are less involved in delinquency and other normbreaking behaviors, and scholars conclude that parents should track their children more carefully. This study questions that conclusion. We point out that monitoring measures typically assess parents' knowledge but not its source, and parents could get knowledge from their children's free disclosure of information as well as their own active surveillance efforts. In our study of 703 14-year-olds in central Sweden and their parents, parental knowledge came mainly from child disclosure, and child disclosure was the source of knowledge that was most closely linked to broad and narrow measures of delinquency (normbreaking and police contact). These results held for both children's and parents' reports, for both sexes, and were independent of whether the children were exhibiting problem behavior or not. We conclude that tracking and surveillance is not the best prescription for parental behavior and that a new prescription must rest on an understanding of the factors that determine child disclosure.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11016567     DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00210

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  452 in total

1.  Parents' monitoring-relevant knowledge and adolescents' delinquent behavior: evidence of correlated developmental changes and reciprocal influences.

Authors:  Robert D Laird; Gregory S Pettit; John E Bates; Kenneth A Dodge
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2003 May-Jun

2.  Child and parent perceptions of monitoring in chronic illness management: a qualitative study.

Authors:  J Hafetz; V A Miller
Journal:  Child Care Health Dev       Date:  2010-06-01       Impact factor: 2.508

3.  Cross-sectional association between smoking depictions in films and adolescent tobacco use nested in a British cohort study.

Authors:  Andrea E Waylen; Sam D Leary; Andrew R Ness; Susanne E Tanski; James D Sargent
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 9.139

4.  Perceived discrimination as a risk factor for Latina/o youth's substance use: do parent- and peer-based communication and relationship resources act as protective factors?

Authors:  Jennifer A Kam; Michael J Cleveland
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2011-03

5.  Guided cognitive reframing of adolescent-father conflict: who Mexican American and European American adolescents seek and why.

Authors:  Jeffrey T Cookston; Andres F Olide; Michele A Adams; William V Fabricius; Ross D Parke
Journal:  New Dir Child Adolesc Dev       Date:  2012

6.  Parental monitoring intervention: practice makes perfect.

Authors:  Xiaoming Li; Bonita Stanton; Jennifer Galbraith; James Burns; Lesley Cottrell; Robert Pack
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 1.798

7.  Neighborhood structure, parenting processes, and the development of youths' externalizing behaviors: a multilevel analysis.

Authors:  Jennifer M Beyers; John E Bates; Gregory S Pettit; Kenneth A Dodge
Journal:  Am J Community Psychol       Date:  2003-03

8.  Parental monitoring, negotiated unsupervised time, and parental trust: the role of perceived parenting practices in adolescent health risk behaviors.

Authors:  Elaine A Borawski; Carolyn E Ievers-Landis; Loren D Lovegreen; Erika S Trapl
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 5.012

9.  Genetic and environmental influences on mothering of adolescents: a comparison of two samples.

Authors:  Jenae M Neiderhiser; David Reiss; Nancy L Pedersen; Paul Lichtenstein; Erica L Spotts; Kjell Hansson; Marianne Cederblad; Olle Ellhammer
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2004-05

10.  Parental monitoring trajectories and gambling among a longitudinal cohort of urban youth.

Authors:  Grace P Lee; Elizabeth A Stuart; Nicholas S Ialongo; Silvia S Martins
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2013-12-10       Impact factor: 6.526

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