Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values

The study explores the relationship between parental autonomy granting, authoritarian values, and children's beliefs in what they can choose to do or not do (free will beliefs) within Singaporean families. A total of 163 Singaporean children aged 4 to 10 and one parent each participated i...

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Main Author: Lee, Clyde Jing Yi
Other Authors: Ho Hau Yan, Andy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175484
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1754842024-04-28T15:32:56Z Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values Lee, Clyde Jing Yi Ho Hau Yan, Andy School of Social Sciences Yue Yu yue.yu@nie.edu.sg, andyhyho@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences The study explores the relationship between parental autonomy granting, authoritarian values, and children's beliefs in what they can choose to do or not do (free will beliefs) within Singaporean families. A total of 163 Singaporean children aged 4 to 10 and one parent each participated in an online study. Children’s beliefs in free will were assessed through scenario-based questions, while parents completed measures evaluating autonomy-granting behaviour and authoritarian values. Results revealed that children’s beliefs in free will was significantly correlated with parental autonomy granting but not authoritarian values. When including both predicters and control variables in a regression model, parental autonomy granting was also found to uniquely contribute to children’s free will beliefs after controlling for children’s age, children’s gender, and parents’ gender. These findings underscore the importance of autonomy granting in fostering children’s understanding of choice and whether they can choose to do something that they do not like or something that is hard for them within the socio-cultural context of Singapore. This study also highlights how the translation of values into day-to-day interactions may be pivotal in children’s development, as well as the need for culturally sensitive approaches to understanding parenting dynamics and child development. Bachelor's degree 2024-04-24T14:07:56Z 2024-04-24T14:07:56Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Lee, C. J. Y. (2024). Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175484 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175484 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Lee, Clyde Jing Yi
Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
description The study explores the relationship between parental autonomy granting, authoritarian values, and children's beliefs in what they can choose to do or not do (free will beliefs) within Singaporean families. A total of 163 Singaporean children aged 4 to 10 and one parent each participated in an online study. Children’s beliefs in free will were assessed through scenario-based questions, while parents completed measures evaluating autonomy-granting behaviour and authoritarian values. Results revealed that children’s beliefs in free will was significantly correlated with parental autonomy granting but not authoritarian values. When including both predicters and control variables in a regression model, parental autonomy granting was also found to uniquely contribute to children’s free will beliefs after controlling for children’s age, children’s gender, and parents’ gender. These findings underscore the importance of autonomy granting in fostering children’s understanding of choice and whether they can choose to do something that they do not like or something that is hard for them within the socio-cultural context of Singapore. This study also highlights how the translation of values into day-to-day interactions may be pivotal in children’s development, as well as the need for culturally sensitive approaches to understanding parenting dynamics and child development.
author2 Ho Hau Yan, Andy
author_facet Ho Hau Yan, Andy
Lee, Clyde Jing Yi
format Final Year Project
author Lee, Clyde Jing Yi
author_sort Lee, Clyde Jing Yi
title Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
title_short Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
title_full Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
title_fullStr Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
title_full_unstemmed Between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
title_sort between parental practices and values: children’s free will beliefs are associated with their parents' autonomy granting but not authoritarian values
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175484
_version_ 1814047275396104192