Publication | Open Access
A Reinterpretation of Parental Monitoring in Longitudinal Perspective
608
Citations
40
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineParental CareLongitudinal PerspectiveEducationAdolescenceSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyParental KnowledgeFamily InteractionYouth Well-beingYouth JusticeParental MonitoringFamily RelationshipsBehavioral SciencesPopulation YouthAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentParent LeadershipChild DevelopmentAdolescent CognitionYouth DisclosureJuvenile DelinquencySociologyFamily Psychology
A commonly used measure of parental monitoring is parents' knowledge of adolescents' daily activities. This measure has been criticized on the grounds that parents get more knowledge about teenagers' daily activities through willing youth disclosure than through their own active monitoring efforts, but this claim was based on cross-sectional data. In the present study, we reexamine this claim with longitudinal data over 2 years from 938 seventh and eighth graders and their parents. Youth disclosure was a significant longitudinal predictor of parental knowledge in single- and cross-rater models. Neither measure of parents' monitoring efforts—control or solicitation—was a significant predictor. In analyses involving delinquency, parental monitoring efforts did not predict changes in delinquency over time, but youth disclosure did. We conclude that because knowledge measures do not seem to represent parental monitoring efforts, the conclusions from studies using these measures should be reinterpreted.
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