Parenting Styles, Adolescent Substance Use, and Academic Achievement
- 1 June 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Drug Education
- Vol. 27 (2) , 199-211
- https://doi.org/10.2190/qpqq-6q1g-uf7d-5utj
Abstract
This article investigates how children and their parents rate their parenting styles, and how this rating is associated with academic achievement, alcohol, and tobacco use. We surveyed students and their parents in two public school districts. A total of 386 matched parent-child pairs from eighth- and ninth-grade students were analyzed for parent and student classification of parents as authoritative, authoritarian, permissive, or mixed parenting styles. Agreement on parenting styles between parents and children was poor. Students perceived parents as less authoritative, less permissive and more authoritarian than parents considered themselves. High grades were associated with child and parent perception of higher authoritativeness, lower permissiveness, and lower authoritarianism. Child tobacco and alcohol use was associated with child perception of lower authoritativeness, and higher permissiveness while parent perception of parenting style was not associated with child substance use. This study provides further evidence that parenting styles and adolescents' perceptions of them are associated with child achievement and substance use. While we cannot determine whether child or parent perception of parenting style is more accurate, child perception is more strongly associated with grades and substance use than is parent perception. It is likely that parents would benefit from understanding how they are perceived by their children.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Parenting Behaviors and the Onset of Smoking and Alcohol Use: A Longitudinal StudyPediatrics, 1994
- The Influence of Parenting Style on Adolescent Competence and Substance UseThe Journal of Early Adolescence, 1991
- The monitoring skills of troubled mothers: Their problems in defining child devianceJournal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1990
- Authoritative Parenting, Psychosocial Maturity, and Academic Success among AdolescentsChild Development, 1989
- CONTRIBUTIONS OF FAMILIES AND PEERS TO DELINQUENCY*Criminology, 1985
- Adolescent Marijuana and Alcohol Use: The Role of Parents and Peers RevisitedThe American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 1985
- The Correlation of Family Management Practices and DelinquencyChild Development, 1984
- The Measurement of Observer Agreement for Categorical DataPublished by JSTOR ,1977