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Parenting Styles and Parent-Child Interactions (page 2)

By D. H. Schunk|P. R. Pintrich|J. Meece
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Other parent-child interactions can influence students’ motivation to school. For example, Newman (2000) reported that parents who give children hints and prompts rather than automatically supplying answers encourage children’s questioning and critical thinking—a pattern found more often among children higher in motivation. Jacobs and Bleeker (2004) reported that parents were more likely to purchase math- and science-related toys and activities for sons than for daughters. Research also suggests that parents help to shape their children’s self-perceptions of ability through causal attributions or explicit statements about their child’s performance, as well as the types of activities they encourage or discourage (Eccles et al., 1998). Parents who make adaptive attributions for their children’s performance, have high confidence in the children’s abilities, and value schoolwork, encourage in their children positive motivational beliefs such as attributions, self-efficacy, and task values. Recent evidence suggests that parental expectations for achievement formed in early adolescence can predict educational plans and career choices 12 years later (Jacobs & Bleeker, 2004).

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