Parent-adolescent communication.

This project involved the development of a questionnaire for measuring parent-adolescent communication on both process and content dimensions. The six process dimensions, chosen on the basis of available literature, were: frequency, initiation, recognition, self-disclosure, domination and satisfaction. Six-point scales with clearly defined scale points were designed for each dimension. Fourteen content areas were also chosen and these were selected to include areas representative of two dimensions: general principles vs. specific issues, and external social reference vs. intrafamily references. First-year university students rated their interactions with their mothers, fathers and both parents together on each of the six process dimensions for each of the fourteen content areas. Parents were asked to rate the same items in the way they thought their adolescent son or daughter would rate them. Results were analysed separately for each process dimension using discriminant analysis, with sex of parent and sex of adolescent as independent variables. Overall, adolescents of both sexes tended to communicate more with mothers than with fathers over a wide range of areas. In fact, politics was the only area on which subjects talked more with fathers than mothers. Also, more self-disclosure occurred to mothers than to fathers, with daughters disclosing more to mothers than did sons. Mothers were also more accurate than fathers at predicting adolescents' responses. The usefulness of the questionnaire for exploring this important area of parent-adolescent communication will be discussed.

[1]  D. F. Roberts,et al.  Do the Mass Media Play a Role in Political Socialisation? , 1975 .

[2]  P. Watzlawick,et al.  Pragmatics of Human Communication: A Study of Interactional Patterns, Pathologies and Paradoxes , 1964 .

[3]  Robert E. Kraut,et al.  Alternate models of family influence on student political ideology. , 1975, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

[4]  S. Jourard,et al.  Self-Disclosure: An Experimental Analysis of the Transparent Self , 1971 .

[5]  K. Tedin The Influence of Parents on the Political Attitudes of Adolescents , 1974, American Political Science Review.

[6]  S. Jourard,et al.  Some factors in self-disclosure. , 1958, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[7]  D. R. Hoge,et al.  Transmission of Religious and Social Values from Parents to Teenage Children. , 1982 .

[8]  B. Forman,et al.  Family environment and its relation to adolescent personality factors. , 1981, Journal of personality assessment.

[9]  S. Bennett,et al.  Student‐parent rapport and parent involvement in sex, birth control, and venereal disease education , 1980 .

[10]  Sol Levin,et al.  The McMaster Model of Family Functioning. , 1978 .

[11]  J. Walters,et al.  Parent-Child Relationships: A Review, 1970-1979. , 1980 .

[12]  J. Bachman The Impact of Family Background and Intelligence on Tenth-Grade Boys. Youth in Transition. Volume II. , 1970 .

[13]  E. Erikson Identity and the life cycle: Selected papers. , 1959 .

[14]  Glen H. Elder join Structural Variations in the Child Rearing Relationship , 1962 .

[15]  P. Noller Nonverbal communication and marital interaction , 1984 .

[16]  H. Klein Child victims of the holocaust , 1974 .

[17]  R. Laing The self and others : further studies in sanity and madness , 1961 .

[18]  P. Gebhard The acquisition of basic sex information , 1977 .

[19]  T. B. Scott,et al.  Self-Disclosure Patterns of Mennonite Adolescents to Parents and Their Perceived Relationships , 1976, Psychological reports.

[20]  G. L. Fox The Mother-Adolescent Daughter Relationship as a Sexual Socialization Structure: A Research Review. , 1980 .

[21]  S. Jourard The Transparent Self , 1964 .

[22]  Lloyd W. West,et al.  A Self-Disclosure Inventory for Adolescents , 1969, Psychological reports.

[23]  Samuel A. Christopher Parental Relationship and Value Orientation as Factors in Academic Achievement , 1967 .

[24]  Lloyd W. West A Study of the Validity of the Self-Disclosure Inventory for Adolescents , 1971 .

[25]  J. Marcia Development and validation of ego-identity status. , 1966, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[26]  J. Haley,et al.  Problem-Solving Therapy , 1976 .

[27]  M. H. B. Joyce,et al.  The Self and Others , 1962 .

[28]  R. Sorensen,et al.  Adolescent Sexuality in Contemporary America. , 1974 .

[29]  James Hauser Adolescents and Religion. , 1981 .

[30]  D. Olson,et al.  Circumplex Model of Marital Systems: An Empirical Study of Clinic and Non‐clinic Couples , 1978 .

[31]  Roberta Matteson Adolescent self-esteem, family communication, and marital satisfaction. , 1974, The Journal of psychology.

[32]  Perceived parental communication and self‐esteem: An exploratory study , 1975 .

[33]  Beatrice Paolucci,et al.  Family Interaction: A Study of Shared Time and Activities. , 1980 .

[34]  S. R. Burkett Religion, Parental Influence, and Adolescent Alcohol and Marijuana Use , 1977 .

[35]  G. Spanier Formal and informal sex education as determinants of premarital sexual behavior , 1976, Archives of sexual behavior.

[36]  J. Balswick,et al.  Self-disclosure to same- and opposite-sex parents: an empirical test of insights from role theory. , 1977, Sociometry.

[37]  G. Homans The human group , 1952 .

[38]  Glen H. Elder join Parental Power Legitimation and Its Effect on the Adolescent , 1963 .