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. 1994 Feb;65(1):237-52.
doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1994.tb00747.x.

Parents' involvement in children's schooling: a multidimensional conceptualization and motivational model

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Parents' involvement in children's schooling: a multidimensional conceptualization and motivational model

W S Grolnick et al. Child Dev. 1994 Feb.

Abstract

This study had 2 goals. The first was to examine a multidimensional conceptualization of parent involvement in children's schooling, defined as the allocation of resources to the child's school endeavors. A second goal was to evaluate a model in which children's motivational resources (i.e., perceived competence, control understanding, and self-regulation) are mediators between parent involvement and children's school performance. 300 11-14-year-old children and their teachers participated. Factor analyses of a set of parent involvement measures supported the hypothesized 3 dimensions of parent involvement: behavior, intellectual/cognitive, and personal. Path analyses revealed indirect effects of mother behavior and intellectual/cognitive involvement on school performance through perceived competence and control understanding, and indirect effects of father behavior on school performance through perceived competence. The results argue against a unidimensional understanding of parent involvement and support the view of the child as an active constructor of his or her school experience.

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