Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception
The cultural normativeness hypothesis posits that parents typically administer physical discipline in a controlled manner in a normative cultural context. Previous research on physical discipline primarily focuses on the frequency at which it occurs, rather than the nature of its delivery. This st...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1778122024-06-02T15:31:39Z Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception Won, Ying Qing Sudo, Mioko Tiemeier, Henning Setoh, Peipei School of Social Sciences Division of Psychology Social Sciences The cultural normativeness hypothesis posits that parents typically administer physical discipline in a controlled manner in a normative cultural context. Previous research on physical discipline primarily focuses on the frequency at which it occurs, rather than the nature of its delivery. This study aimed to illustrate the context, practice, and perception of physical discipline in a culture where physical discipline is common. Singaporean young adults (N = 449, Mage = 22.6, 52% female) completed the Parent-Child Conflict Tactics Scale to assess their childhood experiences of maternal and paternal physical discipline. Further, they recalled emotional and physical reactions to physical discipline, perceived parents’ emotions, implement, immediacy, privacy, and predictability of physical discipline. Overall, 88% of young adults reported at least one occurrence of physical discipline during childhood. The prevalence of maternal physical discipline was higher than that of paternal (ps < .001). Hitting on the palm or bottom with an object (e.g., cane) was the most common form of physical discipline. Moreover, 63% of young adults indicated at least one noticeable injury after physical discipline. Physical discipline was typically predictable and administered in presence of others. Of those who were physically disciplined, 89% recalled some instances of their parents not being in control of emotions during physical discipline. Negative emotions (e.g., feeling fearful of parents) were commonly reported. Even in a context where physical discipline is prevalent, most parents are likely to be not fully in control of their emotions. Non-violent discipline should be promoted to reduce distress and improve parent-child relations. Ministry of Education (MOE) 2024-05-31T03:17:42Z 2024-05-31T03:17:42Z 2024 Working Paper Won, Y. Q., Sudo, M., Tiemeier, H. & Setoh, P. (2024). Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177812 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177812 en RG39/22 RG42/20 NUHSRO/2021/093/NUSMed/13/LOA © 2024 The Author(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf |
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Social Sciences Won, Ying Qing Sudo, Mioko Tiemeier, Henning Setoh, Peipei Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
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The cultural normativeness hypothesis posits that parents typically administer
physical discipline in a controlled manner in a normative cultural context. Previous research on physical discipline primarily focuses on the frequency at which it occurs, rather than the nature of its delivery. This study aimed to illustrate the context, practice, and perception of physical discipline in a culture where physical discipline is common. Singaporean young adults (N = 449, Mage = 22.6, 52% female) completed the Parent-Child Conflict Tactics Scale to assess their childhood experiences of maternal and paternal physical discipline. Further, they recalled emotional and physical reactions to physical discipline, perceived parents’ emotions, implement, immediacy, privacy, and predictability of physical discipline. Overall, 88% of young adults reported at least one occurrence of physical discipline during childhood. The prevalence of maternal physical discipline was higher than that of paternal (ps < .001). Hitting on the palm or bottom with an object (e.g., cane) was the most common form of physical discipline. Moreover, 63% of young adults indicated at least one noticeable injury after physical discipline. Physical discipline was typically predictable and administered in presence of others. Of those who were physically disciplined, 89% recalled some instances of their parents not being in control of emotions during physical discipline. Negative emotions (e.g., feeling fearful of parents) were commonly reported. Even in a context where physical discipline is prevalent, most parents are likely to be not fully in control of their emotions. Non-violent discipline should be promoted to reduce distress and improve parent-child relations. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Won, Ying Qing Sudo, Mioko Tiemeier, Henning Setoh, Peipei |
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Working Paper |
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Won, Ying Qing Sudo, Mioko Tiemeier, Henning Setoh, Peipei |
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Won, Ying Qing |
title |
Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
title_short |
Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
title_full |
Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
title_fullStr |
Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
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Parental physical discipline in Singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
title_sort |
parental physical discipline in singapore: a study of context, practice, and perception |
publishDate |
2024 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177812 |
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1814047130988314624 |