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Personality and contextual correlates of parenting self-efficacy among mothers and fathers of Croatian adolescents (CROSBI ID 559891)

Prilog sa skupa u zborniku | sažetak izlaganja sa skupa | međunarodna recenzija

Keresteš, Gordana Personality and contextual correlates of parenting self-efficacy among mothers and fathers of Croatian adolescents // XIV European Conference on Developmental Psychology Abstracts / Žukauskiene, R. (ur.). Vilnius: Vilnius, Lithuania: Mykolas Romeris University., 2009. str. 97-97

Podaci o odgovornosti

Keresteš, Gordana

engleski

Personality and contextual correlates of parenting self-efficacy among mothers and fathers of Croatian adolescents

Parenting self-efficacy is a construct which importance has recently been highlighted in the literature on parenting. In accordance with Bandurian tradition, it has been most often defined as a self-perception of one's ability to perform competently and effectively in the parental role. Research on parenting self-efficacy is in its infancy, and little is known about the sources and correlates of parenting self-efficacy, as well as about its effects on parenting behavior and child development. The aim of the present study was to investigate personality and contextual correlates of parenting self-efficacy among 812 pairs of mothers and fathers of Croatian young adolescents (age 10 to 15 years). The average age of mothers was 39, and of fathers 42 years. Socio-demographic factors (parental age, education, and employment status ; number of children in the family), big five personality traits, and contextual sources of stress and support (agreement between spouses on child-rearing, marital satisfaction, and social support) were analyzed as possible predictors of parenting self-efficacy. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that contextual and personality factors explained 27 percents of maternal and 31 percent of paternal self-efficacy variance. The most important predictors of both maternal and paternal self-efficacy were neuroticism, conscientiousness, agreement between spouses on child-rearing, and perceived social support. In addition, among fathers, significant predictors of self-efficacy were marital satisfaction and education, while among mothers significant predictor of self-efficacy was openness to experience. Higher parental self-efficacy was related to lower neuroticism, higher conscientiousness, and higher openness to experience (for mothers only), as well as to higher agreement between spouses on child-rearing, higher marital satisfaction (for fathers only), and higher education (for fathers only).

parenting self-efficacy; mothers; fathers; adolescents

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Podaci o prilogu

97-97.

2009.

objavljeno

Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji

XIV European Conference on Developmental Psychology Abstracts

Žukauskiene, R.

Vilnius: Vilnius, Lithuania: Mykolas Romeris University.

978-609-95098-0-8

Podaci o skupu

XIV European Conference on Developmental Psychology

poster

18.08.2009-22.08.2009

Vilnius, Litva

Povezanost rada

Psihologija