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Parental styles and religious values among teenagers: a 3-year prospective analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 07:05 authored by Patrick Heaven, Joseph Ciarrochi, Peter LeesonPeter Leeson
The authors examined the effect of Grade 7 parental styles on Grade 10 religious values. The authors surveyed 784 participants (382 boys, 394 girls; 8 unreported) in Grade 7. The mean age of the group at Time 1 was 12.3 years (SD = 0.5 years). Time 2 occurred 3 years later when students were in Grade 10 (372 boys, 375 girls). In addition to assessing parental styles at Time 1, we also controlled for a number of Time 1 variables thought to possibly influence Time 2 religious values, namely, self-esteem, trait hope, and students' levels of conscientiousness. Time 1 measures (except self-esteem) were significantly correlated with Time 2 religious values, but only parental authoritativeness and hope significantly predicted religious values. The authors discuss these results with reference to the nature of parental styles and hope and their impact on religious values.

Funding

Predicting health, well-being, and educational success in emerging adults: An 8 year longitudinal study

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Heaven, P. C. L. ., Ciarrochi, J. V. & Leeson, P. (2010). Parental styles and religious values among teenagers: a 3-year prospective analysis. The Journal Of Genetic Psychology, 171 (1), 93-99.

Journal title

Journal of Genetic Psychology

Volume

171

Issue

1

Pagination

93-99

Language

English

RIS ID

36930

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