Parental evaluations and their agreement: Relationship with children's self-concepts

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Sing Lau
Kit-Ling Pun
Cite this article:  Lau, S., & Pun, K.-L. (1999). Parental evaluations and their agreement: Relationship with children's self-concepts. Social Behavior and Personality: An international journal, 27(6), 639-650.


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The relationships between parents’ evaluations of their children, and agreement between parental evaluations and children’s self-evaluations in 4 self-concept domains (academic, physical, social and general) were examined in the present study. A sample of 974 families, each consisting of a father, a mother, and a child aged 8-13, were included. Significant correlations were found between parental (especially maternal) evaluations and children’s self-concepts. There was a significant relationship between parent-parent agreement and children’s self-concepts. Children with parents who disagreed tended to have lower self-concepts than those with parents who agreed positively. They tended also to be more influenced by maternal evaluations. Across sex and grade, academic self-concept was the domain in which parental evaluation impact was the greatest.


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