Publication | Closed Access
Self-Fulfilling Prophecies
63
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Future Drinking BehaviorChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSubstance UseSubstance AbusePsychiatryAlcohol MisuseAlcohol DependenceSocial PsychologyLongitudinal DataAlcohol AbuseSocial SciencesMedicineNegative BeliefsPsychologyChild DevelopmentDevelopmental Psychology
This research examined whether mothers' and fathers' beliefs about their children's alcohol use had cumulative self-fulfilling effects on their children's future drinking behavior. Analyses of longitudinal data acquired from 115 seventh-grade children and their mothers and fathers were consistent with synergistic accumulation effects for negative beliefs: Parents' beliefs predicted the greatest degree of confirmatory behavior from children when both mothers and fathers overestimated their children's alcohol use. Results did not support synergistic accumulation effects for positive beliefs: Children's predicted future alcohol use was similar regardless of whether one parent or both underestimated their child's alcohol use. These findings suggest that the generally small self-fulfilling effects reported in the literature may underestimate the power of negative self-fulfilling prophecies to harm targets because studies have not taken into consideration the possibility that negative self-fulfilling prophecies may be more likely than positive ones to accumulate across multiple perceivers.
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