The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement

The role of child's gender and academic achievement on perceived parental expectation on academic achievement was investigated in this study involving 140 first year students, composed of four groups, with 35 students per group. The four groups included in the study were: the honors' class...

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Main Authors: Dalisay, Dalisay D., Dy, Marianne Regina T., Miranda, Josephine P.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 1998
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/6103
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_bachelors-67472021-07-12T13:38:57Z The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement Dalisay, Dalisay D. Dy, Marianne Regina T. Miranda, Josephine P. The role of child's gender and academic achievement on perceived parental expectation on academic achievement was investigated in this study involving 140 first year students, composed of four groups, with 35 students per group. The four groups included in the study were: the honors' class for the boys, the honors' class for the girls, a regulars' class for the boys, and a regulars' class for the girls. It was hypothesized that perceptions of mothers and fathers on achievement differ among boys and girls, and honor and non-honor students. An FGD was conducted with 10 honor students to derive items to measure parental behavior, as indicators of expectations on academic achievement. A twenty-item questionnaire was administered, and data were analyzed by taking the t-scores. Findings revealed that if students are grouped according to gender, females perceived that their parents, specifically their mothers to have higher expectations on their academic achievement. When students are grouped according to academic achievement, honor students perceived their parents to expect more from them, than did the non-honors' group. Mothers were also perceived to have higher expectations on academic achievement. 1998-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/6103 Bachelor's Theses English Animo Repository Academic achievement Children--Genetic aspects Expectation (Psychology) Education--Parent participation Performance in children
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
language English
topic Academic achievement
Children--Genetic aspects
Expectation (Psychology)
Education--Parent participation
Performance in children
spellingShingle Academic achievement
Children--Genetic aspects
Expectation (Psychology)
Education--Parent participation
Performance in children
Dalisay, Dalisay D.
Dy, Marianne Regina T.
Miranda, Josephine P.
The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
description The role of child's gender and academic achievement on perceived parental expectation on academic achievement was investigated in this study involving 140 first year students, composed of four groups, with 35 students per group. The four groups included in the study were: the honors' class for the boys, the honors' class for the girls, a regulars' class for the boys, and a regulars' class for the girls. It was hypothesized that perceptions of mothers and fathers on achievement differ among boys and girls, and honor and non-honor students. An FGD was conducted with 10 honor students to derive items to measure parental behavior, as indicators of expectations on academic achievement. A twenty-item questionnaire was administered, and data were analyzed by taking the t-scores. Findings revealed that if students are grouped according to gender, females perceived that their parents, specifically their mothers to have higher expectations on their academic achievement. When students are grouped according to academic achievement, honor students perceived their parents to expect more from them, than did the non-honors' group. Mothers were also perceived to have higher expectations on academic achievement.
format text
author Dalisay, Dalisay D.
Dy, Marianne Regina T.
Miranda, Josephine P.
author_facet Dalisay, Dalisay D.
Dy, Marianne Regina T.
Miranda, Josephine P.
author_sort Dalisay, Dalisay D.
title The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
title_short The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
title_full The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
title_fullStr The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
title_full_unstemmed The role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
title_sort role of child's gender and academic achievement in the perception of parental expectation of academic achievement
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 1998
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/6103
_version_ 1712576543135367168