Parental Monitoring of Children's Behavior: Variation Across Stepmother, Stepfather, and Two-Parent Biological Families

Previous longitudinal research has shown that parental monitoring is a powerful predictor of child outcomes. Children from families with low levels of monitoring are particularly at risk for antisocial behavior, difficulties in school, and related problems. We studied whether parental monitoring-as...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFamily relations Vol. 52; no. 1; pp. 45 - 52
Main Authors Fisher, Philip A., Leve, Leslie D., O'Leary, Catherine C., Leve, Craig
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing 01.01.2003
National Council on Family Relations
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Summary:Previous longitudinal research has shown that parental monitoring is a powerful predictor of child outcomes. Children from families with low levels of monitoring are particularly at risk for antisocial behavior, difficulties in school, and related problems. We studied whether parental monitoring-as reported by mothers/stepmothers, fathers/stepfathers, interviewers, and teachers-differs across two-parent biological families, stepmother families, and stepfather families. Two-parent biological families were hypothesized to have higher levels of monitoring than stepparent families. Controlling for demographic differences, two-parent biological families showed higher levels of monitoring than stepfather families but did not differ significantly from stepmother families. The significant difference between stepfather and two-parent biological families involved the length of the relationship: only biological families of shorter duration (9 years or fewer) had higher levels of monitoring than stepfather families.
Bibliography:Support for this project was provided by the following grants: MH46690, NIMH and ORMH, U.S. PHS.; MH37911, NIMH, U.S. PHS.; HD19739, NICHD, U.S. PHS.; DA12231, NIDA, U.S. PHS.; and MH59780, NIMH, U.S. PHS. Data for this study were drawn from a research project that was initiated by Beverly I. Fagot (now deceased). We are grateful to Dr. Fagot for her support, guidance, and mentorship. We would like to thank Anna Suski for her analytical assistance, Matthew Rabel for his editorial assistance, and all of the families who took time out of their busy schedules to participate in this project.
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ISSN:0197-6664
1741-3729
0197-6664
DOI:10.1111/j.1741-3729.2003.00045.x