Authoritarian parenting and Asian adolescent school performance: Insights from the US and Taiwan

Citation

Pong, Suet-ling; Johnston, Jamie; & Chen, Vivien (2010). Authoritarian parenting and Asian adolescent school performance: Insights from the US and Taiwan. International Journal of Behavioral Development. vol. 34 (1) pp. 62-72 , PMCID: PMC4026298

Abstract

Our study re-examines the relationship between parenting and school performance among Asian students. We use two sources of data: wave I of the Adolescent Health Longitudinal Survey (Add Health), and waves I and II of the Taiwan Educational Panel Survey (TEPS). Analysis using Add Health reveals that the Asian-American/European-American difference in the parenting—school performance relationship is due largely to differential sample sizes. When we select a random sample of European-American students comparable to the sample size of Asian-American students, authoritarian parenting also shows no effect for European-American students. Furthermore, analysis of TEPS shows that authoritarian parenting is negatively associated with children’s school achievement, while authoritative parenting is positively associated. This result for Taiwanese Chinese students is similar to previous results for European-American students in the US.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0165025409345073

Keyword(s)

School

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

International Journal of Behavioral Development

Author(s)

Pong, Suet-ling
Johnston, Jamie
Chen, Vivien

Year Published

2010

Volume Number

34

Issue Number

1

Pages

62-72

DOI

10.1177/0165025409345073

PMCID

PMC4026298

NIHMSID

NIHMS576523

Reference ID

1251