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通过同伴中介效应评价父母参与对中国青少年行为发展的影响:一个有调节的中介模型
Authors Zhao L
Received 16 January 2024
Accepted for publication 25 April 2024
Published 3 May 2024 Volume 2024:17 Pages 1881—1901
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S459742
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Professor Mei-Chun Cheung
Lie Zhao
School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Shaanxi, People’s Republic of China
Correspondence: Lie Zhao, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Xi’an Jiaotong University, No. 28 Xianning West Road, Xi’an, Shaanxi, 710049, People’s Republic of China, Email 1663421212@qq.com
Background: With the rapid changes in the social environment, adolescents are facing increasing academic pressure and challenges to their physical and mental development in the socialization process. The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence mechanisms of parental participation on adolescent behavioral development (learning persistence, expressive language ability and knowledge absorption ability), revealing the mediation role of adolescent positive and negative peer interactions between parental participation and behavioral development, and whether differences in parents and children’s educational expectations moderate this process.
Methods: This study was measured using the Parental Participation Questionnaire, Peer Interaction Questionnaire, Behavioral Development Scale, and Educational Expectancy Gap from the China Education Panel Survey. A total of 7730 seventh-grade students and their parents were invited to participate, to establish a moderated mediation model, and the significance of the mediation effect was tested using the bias-corrected percentile Bootstrap method.
Results: (1) High frequent parental participation has a significant positive effect on adolescent behavioral development, including behavioral participation, emotional participation, and educational participation all exerting varying degrees of positive influence, as well as positively influencing adolescents’ peer interactions. (2) Positive and negative peer interactions play the mediation role of 12.3% and 2.5% respectively in the process of parental participation affecting adolescent behavioral development. (3) Comparing “educational expectation gap - equal”, the “educational expectation gap - high” negatively moderates the effect of parental participation on adolescent behavioral development and positive peer interaction (inhibitory effect), the “educational expectation gap - low” positively moderates the effect of parental participation on negative peer interaction (facilitation effect), which meant that the “educational expectation gap - equal” between parents and children is a more desirable state.
Conclusion: These findings provide empirical support and effective operational suggestions to further promote positive adolescent behavioral development. Particularly for developing countries, it is recognized that positive parental participation and peer interaction, as well as equal educational expectation of parents and children, are protective factors for adolescent development.
Keywords: parental participation, positive peer interaction, negative peer interaction, educational expectation gap, behavioral development