“Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism

It is widely believed that parents play a role in the outcome of their children. However, there is a scarcity in the literature tackling the parent-child relationship with regard to activist behaviors in offspring. To address this deficit, the study surveyed Senior High School students (N = 300) fro...

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Main Authors: Arteta, Alfonso Raphael T., Bayot, Ryan Gabriel C., Famy, Kenneth Charles T., Omillo, Ren Ren C., Go, Stella P.
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Published: Animo Repository 2022
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/conf_shsrescon/2022/paper_frs/1
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:conf_shsrescon-10722022-05-02T06:18:14Z “Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism Arteta, Alfonso Raphael T. Bayot, Ryan Gabriel C. Famy, Kenneth Charles T. Omillo, Ren Ren C. Go, Stella P. It is widely believed that parents play a role in the outcome of their children. However, there is a scarcity in the literature tackling the parent-child relationship with regard to activist behaviors in offspring. To address this deficit, the study surveyed Senior High School students (N = 300) from the Integrated School of a private Metro Manila university to measure their involvement in social activism (adolescent activism) and to identify its relationship with parental factors (parental activism, parental support, parental psychological control) while accounting for sex and academic strand. The top three (3) forms of activism that the students engaged in were social media activism, voluntary work in educational activities, and e-volunteerism. Results indicate that females and their parents engage in social activism more than males and their parents. A significant difference in adolescent activism was found between the academic strands (F(2,297) = 3.15, p = .04), with HUMSS students scoring significantly higher than STEM students. After controlling for sex and strand, parental activism was found to be the most significant correlate of adolescent activism (R² = .37, F(4, 292) = 42.43, p = <.001), followed by parental psychological control (R² = .4, F(5, 292) = 38.38, p = <.001). 2022-05-13T17:30:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/conf_shsrescon/2022/paper_frs/1 DLSU Senior High School Research Congress Animo Repository "adolescent activism parental factors parental activism parental support parental psychological control" Social and Behavioral Sciences
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic "adolescent activism
parental factors
parental activism
parental support
parental psychological control"
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle "adolescent activism
parental factors
parental activism
parental support
parental psychological control"
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Arteta, Alfonso Raphael T.
Bayot, Ryan Gabriel C.
Famy, Kenneth Charles T.
Omillo, Ren Ren C.
Go, Stella P.
“Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism
description It is widely believed that parents play a role in the outcome of their children. However, there is a scarcity in the literature tackling the parent-child relationship with regard to activist behaviors in offspring. To address this deficit, the study surveyed Senior High School students (N = 300) from the Integrated School of a private Metro Manila university to measure their involvement in social activism (adolescent activism) and to identify its relationship with parental factors (parental activism, parental support, parental psychological control) while accounting for sex and academic strand. The top three (3) forms of activism that the students engaged in were social media activism, voluntary work in educational activities, and e-volunteerism. Results indicate that females and their parents engage in social activism more than males and their parents. A significant difference in adolescent activism was found between the academic strands (F(2,297) = 3.15, p = .04), with HUMSS students scoring significantly higher than STEM students. After controlling for sex and strand, parental activism was found to be the most significant correlate of adolescent activism (R² = .37, F(4, 292) = 42.43, p = <.001), followed by parental psychological control (R² = .4, F(5, 292) = 38.38, p = <.001).
format text
author Arteta, Alfonso Raphael T.
Bayot, Ryan Gabriel C.
Famy, Kenneth Charles T.
Omillo, Ren Ren C.
Go, Stella P.
author_facet Arteta, Alfonso Raphael T.
Bayot, Ryan Gabriel C.
Famy, Kenneth Charles T.
Omillo, Ren Ren C.
Go, Stella P.
author_sort Arteta, Alfonso Raphael T.
title “Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism
title_short “Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism
title_full “Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism
title_fullStr “Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism
title_full_unstemmed “Does the Apple Fall Far from the Tree?” The Role of Parental Factors in Filipino Adolescent Activism
title_sort “does the apple fall far from the tree?” the role of parental factors in filipino adolescent activism
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2022
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/conf_shsrescon/2022/paper_frs/1
_version_ 1733052696645074944