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A Cross-Cultural Perspective of Parental Influence on Female Adolescents' Achievement Beliefs and Behaviors in Sport and School Domains
Authors:Jin H Yan  Ward A Rodriguez  Jerry R Thomas
Institution:1. Department of Kinesiology/Physical Education , California State University , Hayward;2. Statistics and Psychology Departments , California State University , Hayward;3. Department of Health and Human Performance , Iowa Sate University
Abstract:Little is known about parental socialization processes for youth participants from different cultural backgrounds. The purpose of this study was to examine parental influence on self-perceptions, task values, and achievement behaviors among female adolescents from two cultures using Eccles' expectancy-value theory (Eccles et al., 1983) . Twelve Anglo Canadian and nine East Indian female adolescents were interviewed about perceptions of parental influence on expectancy-value constructs for sport and academic domains. Inductive and deductive content analyses were performed to identify lower and higher order themes from interview responses. Similarities and differences in perceived parental influence emerged for girls of both cultural groups and in both domains. Our findings support links among expectancy-value constructs and highlight cultural variations in parental socialization of achievement cognitions and behaviors in multiple domains.
Keywords:learning  normality  Shapiro-Wilk test
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