Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline
Despite being banned in more than 30 countries, physical discipline remains legal and widely accepted in Singapore, with eight in ten parents reporting its use. Given that physical discipline is associated with detrimental outcomes such as increased aggression and poor parent-child relationships, th...
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2023
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1682712023-11-29T07:59:29Z Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline Er, Jia Yun Setoh Pei Pei School of Social Sciences psetoh@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Despite being banned in more than 30 countries, physical discipline remains legal and widely accepted in Singapore, with eight in ten parents reporting its use. Given that physical discipline is associated with detrimental outcomes such as increased aggression and poor parent-child relationships, the present study aims to investigate why this disciplinary method continues to receive widespread acceptance in Singapore by adopting a qualitative approach. 30 parent-child dyads were recruited for the semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis revealed three unique themes, (a) perceived as normative practice, (b) perceived as serving both parent and child-centred goals and, (c) shaped children’s perceptions of deservedness and necessity. These themes suggest that most Singaporeans have internalized and accepted the use of physical discipline, viewing physical discipline as normative, deserved and beneficial. Such findings thus highlight that more needs to be done to change Singaporeans’ perceptions of physical discipline and to deter its use. This may be through laws prohibiting physical discipline and nation-wide programmes to educate Singaporeans on the negative effects of physical discipline. As this study relied largely on participants’ recollections, future studies can consider conducting longitudinal studies to better understand physical discipline attitudes at different time-points and to examine changes in children’s attitudes after becoming parents themselves. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2023-06-09T11:28:23Z 2023-06-09T11:28:23Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Er, J. Y. (2023). Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168271 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168271 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Social sciences::Psychology Er, Jia Yun Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
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Despite being banned in more than 30 countries, physical discipline remains legal and widely accepted in Singapore, with eight in ten parents reporting its use. Given that physical discipline is associated with detrimental outcomes such as increased aggression and poor parent-child relationships, the present study aims to investigate why this disciplinary method continues to receive widespread acceptance in Singapore by adopting a qualitative approach. 30 parent-child dyads were recruited for the semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis revealed three unique themes, (a) perceived as normative practice, (b) perceived as serving both parent and child-centred goals and, (c) shaped children’s perceptions of deservedness and necessity. These themes suggest that most Singaporeans have internalized and accepted the use of physical discipline, viewing physical discipline as normative, deserved and beneficial. Such findings thus highlight that more needs to be done to change Singaporeans’ perceptions of physical discipline and to deter its use. This may be through laws prohibiting physical discipline and nation-wide programmes to educate Singaporeans on the negative effects of physical discipline. As this study relied largely on participants’ recollections, future studies can consider conducting longitudinal studies to better understand physical discipline attitudes at different time-points and to examine changes in children’s attitudes after becoming parents themselves. |
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Setoh Pei Pei |
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Setoh Pei Pei Er, Jia Yun |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Er, Jia Yun |
author_sort |
Er, Jia Yun |
title |
Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
title_short |
Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
title_full |
Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
title_fullStr |
Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
title_full_unstemmed |
Understanding the childhood experiences of Singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
title_sort |
understanding the childhood experiences of singaporeans: a qualitative study analysing parents' and young adult children's perceptions of physical discipline |
publisher |
Nanyang Technological University |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168271 |
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1783955581847994368 |