Longitudinal changes in the time parents spend in activities with their adolescent children as a function of child age, pubertal status, and gender
- PMID: 12561286
- DOI: 10.1037//0893-3200.16.4.415
Longitudinal changes in the time parents spend in activities with their adolescent children as a function of child age, pubertal status, and gender
Abstract
This study examined the time Dutch mothers (N = 301) and fathers (N = 255) spend per day engaging in 4 activities (going somewhere, doing something, watching TV, and eating together) with their adolescent children both concurrently and 5 years later. Also assessed was whether parent-child shared time was related to parent or child gender and whether age-related differences could be explained by adolescent pubertal status, family conflict, adolescent and parent work or volunteer hours, parental work stress, and adolescent computer use. Finally, the study examined whether family conflict predicted changes in shared time and whether shared time predicted changes in conflict. The findings showed that age changes depended on the activity and that pubertal status mediated age differences in TV viewing among mixed-gender parent-child pairs. Shared time during pre-, early, and mid-adolescence was linked to decreases in family conflict 5 years later.
Comment in
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Family rituals--from research to the consulting room and back again: comment on the special section.J Fam Psychol. 2002 Dec;16(4):445-6. doi: 10.1037//0893-3200.16.4.445. J Fam Psychol. 2002. PMID: 12561290
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