Pepperdine Digital Commons - Seaver College Research And Scholarly Achievement Symposium: The Relationship Between Parental Control and Children’s Emotional and Academic Success in Adulthood
 

Presentation Type

Poster

Presentation Type

Submission

Keywords

Parental restrictive control, relaxed parenting, subjective happiness, perceived wellness, academic performance

Department

Psychology

Major

Psychology

Abstract

College is an important time of transition for adolescents going into adulthood, experiencing life for the first time away from their parents. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between the amount of parental restrictive control during adolescence and the level of subjective happiness, perceived wellness, and academic performance reported in college. Participants included 134 college students who completed an online survey that included the Subjective Happiness Scale, Academic Performance Scale, Perceived Wellness Survey, the Parental Restrictive Control Questionnaire for primary parent/guardian and secondary parent/guardian, and a variety of demographic questions. Results did not support any of the hypotheses: higher levels of parental restrictive control would predict high academic achievement, lower happiness, and lower perceived wellness. As parenting approaches continue to change from generation to generation, the results of this study add the new idea that parental restrictive control, when tested alone, does not impact a college student's emotional or academic success in adulthood. These findings provide a new perspective on the pillar theory as this study considers solely parental restrictive control, unlike past research that used other variables such as parental warmth in addition to parental restrictive control. More research is needed on the difference between parental restrictive control and demandingness as used in the pillar theory.

Faculty Mentor

Cindy Miller-Perrin

Location

Waves Cafeteria

Start Date

11-4-2025 1:00 PM

End Date

11-4-2025 2:00 PM

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Apr 11th, 1:00 PM Apr 11th, 2:00 PM

The Relationship Between Parental Control and Children’s Emotional and Academic Success in Adulthood

Waves Cafeteria

College is an important time of transition for adolescents going into adulthood, experiencing life for the first time away from their parents. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between the amount of parental restrictive control during adolescence and the level of subjective happiness, perceived wellness, and academic performance reported in college. Participants included 134 college students who completed an online survey that included the Subjective Happiness Scale, Academic Performance Scale, Perceived Wellness Survey, the Parental Restrictive Control Questionnaire for primary parent/guardian and secondary parent/guardian, and a variety of demographic questions. Results did not support any of the hypotheses: higher levels of parental restrictive control would predict high academic achievement, lower happiness, and lower perceived wellness. As parenting approaches continue to change from generation to generation, the results of this study add the new idea that parental restrictive control, when tested alone, does not impact a college student's emotional or academic success in adulthood. These findings provide a new perspective on the pillar theory as this study considers solely parental restrictive control, unlike past research that used other variables such as parental warmth in addition to parental restrictive control. More research is needed on the difference between parental restrictive control and demandingness as used in the pillar theory.

 

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