Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection

The link between parental discipline and aggression in children is a well-established one. However, studies largely focus on maternal corporal punishment, ignoring the role of fathers and other types of punishment. There is also a lack of research on the disciplineaggression link in Singapore. Thi...

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Main Author: Soon, Sarah Yu Mei
Other Authors: Olivia Choy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77095
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-770952019-12-10T14:11:44Z Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection Soon, Sarah Yu Mei Olivia Choy School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology The link between parental discipline and aggression in children is a well-established one. However, studies largely focus on maternal corporal punishment, ignoring the role of fathers and other types of punishment. There is also a lack of research on the disciplineaggression link in Singapore. This paper aims to examine the associations between parental discipline (nonviolent, psychological, and physical) and aggression (physical, verbal, anger, hostility, indirect) in a Singapore sample, while considering covariates like age, gender, social adversity, and ethnicity. The role of parental care and overprotection as moderators in the relationship between discipline and aggression is also examined. The Buss-Warren Aggression Questionnaire, Parent-Child Conflicts Tactics Scale, and Parental Bonding Instrument were used with a Singapore adult sample (n = 231). Contrary to previous research, nonviolent discipline by both parents was positively associated with aggression. Evidence of differential parenting across parents emerged for physical and psychological discipline. Maternal discipline was positively associated with all aggression subtypes, while paternal discipline was positively associated with hostility and indirect aggression. Significant moderating effects for paternal care and overprotection emerged in the relationship between parenting and aggression, but no significant moderating effects of maternal care and overprotection were observed. Results suggest that mothers could consider adopting more positive discipline methods, and fathers should continue to play an integral role in parenting. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2019-05-07T03:56:58Z 2019-05-07T03:56:58Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77095 en 58 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Soon, Sarah Yu Mei
Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
description The link between parental discipline and aggression in children is a well-established one. However, studies largely focus on maternal corporal punishment, ignoring the role of fathers and other types of punishment. There is also a lack of research on the disciplineaggression link in Singapore. This paper aims to examine the associations between parental discipline (nonviolent, psychological, and physical) and aggression (physical, verbal, anger, hostility, indirect) in a Singapore sample, while considering covariates like age, gender, social adversity, and ethnicity. The role of parental care and overprotection as moderators in the relationship between discipline and aggression is also examined. The Buss-Warren Aggression Questionnaire, Parent-Child Conflicts Tactics Scale, and Parental Bonding Instrument were used with a Singapore adult sample (n = 231). Contrary to previous research, nonviolent discipline by both parents was positively associated with aggression. Evidence of differential parenting across parents emerged for physical and psychological discipline. Maternal discipline was positively associated with all aggression subtypes, while paternal discipline was positively associated with hostility and indirect aggression. Significant moderating effects for paternal care and overprotection emerged in the relationship between parenting and aggression, but no significant moderating effects of maternal care and overprotection were observed. Results suggest that mothers could consider adopting more positive discipline methods, and fathers should continue to play an integral role in parenting.
author2 Olivia Choy
author_facet Olivia Choy
Soon, Sarah Yu Mei
format Final Year Project
author Soon, Sarah Yu Mei
author_sort Soon, Sarah Yu Mei
title Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
title_short Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
title_full Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
title_fullStr Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
title_full_unstemmed Parental discipline and aggression in Singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
title_sort parental discipline and aggression in singaporean adults : the role of a parental care and overprotection
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77095
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