Parental Predictors of Children’s Math Learning Behaviours in Different Cultures

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Date

2022

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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No
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Average
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Average
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Average

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Abstract

Research indicates that parental schoolwork involvement is beneficial for students' academic functioning when parents facilitate their children's autonomy and refrain from psychological controlling practices. However, effects of the quality of parental involvement on child learning outcomes may vary due to cross-cultural differences in children's appraisal and reaction towards these practices. The current study aimed to investigate the link between the quality of parental schoolwork involvement and children's learning-related behaviours in math, and the mediating role of mother-child conflict around math schoolwork in this link in three cultural groups (i.e., German-Turkish, Turkish and German families). Data were collected from 107 German-Turkish, 426 Turkish and 140 German mothers with children in fifth to eighth grades. After testing measurement invariance of the scales across groups, multi-group structural equation modelling was used to examine the direct and indirect paths between the quality of parental involvement, mother-child conflict and child learning-related behaviours. Results showed that the level of mother-child conflict mediated the link between mothers' psychologically controlling practices and children's learning-related behaviours in math in all three groups. No mediation was found for the link between maternal autonomy support and children's learning-related behaviours in any group. However, the direct path from mothers' autonomy support to children's learning-related behaviours was significant in the Turkish and German-Turkish samples. These results suggest that the role of different forms of parental schoolwork involvement in children's academic functioning is more similar than different across cultural groups.

Description

Keywords

Psychological control, Learning-related behaviour, Cross-cultural comparison, Mother-child conflict, Autonomy support, Parent involvement, Parent involvement, Psychological control, Cross-cultural comparison, Learning-related behaviour, Autonomy support, Mother-child conflict

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences, 0503 education

Citation

Niehues, W., Selcuk, B., & Kisbu-Sakarya, Y. (2022). Parental Predictors of Children’s Math Learning Behaviours in Different Cultures. Journal of Child and Family Studies. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-022-02501-z?

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
2

Source

Journal of Child and Family Studies

Volume

32

Issue

Start Page

3554

End Page

3567
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Scopus : 2

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Mendeley Readers : 21

SCOPUS™ Citations

2

checked on Feb 03, 2026

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2

checked on Feb 03, 2026

Page Views

238

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Downloads

309

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1.89815068

Sustainable Development Goals

3

GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING Logo

5

GENDER EQUALITY
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8

DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
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17

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