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Parental autonomy granting during adolescence: Exploring gender differences in context.
168
Citations
41
References
2001
Year
Parental CareFamily InvolvementGender Role AttitudesEducationAutonomyAdolescenceSocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyGender IdentityGender StudiesParental KnowledgeParental Autonomy GrantingAdolescent DevelopmentChild DevelopmentAdolescent CognitionParental AutonomyGender DevelopmentSociologyPediatricsFamily Dynamic
This study investigated the ways in which 2 indicators of parental autonomy granting, adolescents' decision-making input and parental knowledge of adolescents' daily experiences, differed as a function of contextual factors (i.e., parents' gender role attitudes or sibling dyad sex composition) and boys' and girls' personal qualities (i.e., gender, pubertal status, developmental status, or birth order) in a sample of 194 families with firstborn (M = 15.0 years) and second-born (M = 12.5 years) adolescents. Firstborns were granted more autonomy than second borns, especially in families with firstborn girls and second-born boys. Girls in families marked by traditional maternal gender role attitudes were granted fewer autonomy opportunities. Postmenarcheal second-born girls were granted more opportunities for autonomy than were premenarcheal second-born girls, but only in families with less traditional maternal gender role attitudes.
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