Deakin University
Browse

File(s) under permanent embargo

The role of parental self-efficacy in adolescent school-refusal

journal contribution
posted on 2015-04-01, 00:00 authored by Belinda Carless, Glenn MelvinGlenn Melvin, Bruce J Tonge, Louise K Newman
Parental characteristics such as psychopathology and parenting practices are understood to be implicated in school-refusal presentations. Expanding upon these largely affective and behavioral factors, the present study sought to examine the role of a parenting cognitive construct--parenting self-efficacy--in understanding school-refusal. School-refusing adolescents (n = 60, 53% male) and school-attending adolescents (n = 46, 39% male) aged 12-17 years (M = 13.93, SD = 1.33), along with a parent, participated in the study. Participants completed study measures of demographics, psychopathology, overall family functioning, and parenting self-efficacy. As expected, parents of school-refusing adolescents were found to have lower levels of parental self-efficacy than parents of school-attending adolescents. Parenting self-efficacy was inversely associated with parent- and adolescent- psychopathology as well as family dysfunction. Logistic regression analyses determined parenting self-efficacy to be a predictor of school-refusal. However, upon controlling for related constructs including family dysfunction, adolescent depression, and parent depression, the predictive capacity of parenting self-efficacy was eliminated. Taken together, the results highlight the likely complex relationships between parental self-efficacy, familial psychopathology, and dysfunctional family processes within this population. Research is required to further delineate these dynamic relationships among families of school-refusing adolescents.

History

Journal

Journal of family psychology

Volume

29

Issue

2

Pagination

162 - 170

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Location

Washington, D.C.

eISSN

1939-1293

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, American Psychological Association