Authors
B Bradford Brown, Nina Mounts, Susie D Lamborn, Laurence Steinberg
Publication date
1993/4
Journal
Child development
Volume
64
Issue
2
Pages
467-482
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Social scientists have often assumed that parental influence is sharply curtailed at adolescence because of the rising counterinfluence of peer groups, over which parents have little control. The present study tested a conceptual model that challenged this view by arguing that parents retain a notable but indirect influence over their teenage child's peer associates. Data from a sample of 3,781 high school students (ages 15–19) indicated that specific parenting practices (monitoring, encouragement of achievement, joint decision making) were significantly associated with specific adolescent behaviors (academic achievement, drug use, self‐reliance), which in turn were significantly related to membership in common adolescent crowds (jocks, druggies, etc.). Findings encourage investigators to assess more carefully parents' role in adolescents' peer group affiliations.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BB Brown, N Mounts, SD Lamborn, L Steinberg - Child development, 1993