Micki M. Caskey’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Adolescents' Psychological Well-Being and Perceived Parental Involvement: Implications for Parental Involvement in Middle Schools
  • Article

November 2008

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1,615 Reads

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166 Citations

RMLE Online

Micki M. Caskey

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Kayla Cripps

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Adolescence is a critical period of development. Previous research suggests parent involvement in school directly impacts student success. However, different types of parental involvement and the efforts of middle school personnel to educate parents about these effective practices have received scant attention in the literature. The level and type of parental involvement, as perceived by adolescents, is correlated with adolescent psychological wellbeing. Perceived parental involvement positively or negatively affects adolescents’ sense of psychological well-being, especially self-esteem, self-evaluation, and peer relationships. Parenting style greatly influences children’s development as well. The authoritative/democratic parenting style influences middle school children, leading to positive developmental outcomes, positive adolescent selfevaluations, higher levels of adolescent self-esteem and adjustment, while also positively influencing levels of intrinsic motivation for learning. This article reviews research related to (a) adolescents’ perceptions of parental involvement, (b) the parenting style related to higher levels of psychological wellbeing, and (c) the impact of assorted parenting styles on adolescent psychological well-being. It concludes with implications for middle school systems, middle school counselors, families, parents, and community members.

Citations (1)


... Positive parental involvement (e.g. supportive communication, active interaction with school, etc.) in adolescents' lives can improve parent-adolescent intergenerational relationships, adolescents' self-esteem, and self-evaluation (Causey et al., 2015;Cripps & Zyromski, 2009), which in turn reduces depressive symptoms among adolescents (Wang & Sheikh-Khalil, 2014;Ying & Han, 2008). In addition, the promoted parent-adolescent intergenerational relationship by parental involvement may also contribute to adolescents' academic achievement and provide a relationship model for them to follow, so that they can get along well with others and have better social relationships (e.g. with peers/teachers at schools) outside the family context (Chen & Gregory, 2009;Wang & Sheikh-Khalil, 2014). ...

Reference:

Parental Phubbing and Adolescent Depression: The Role of Parental Involvement and Adolescent Grit
Adolescents' Psychological Well-Being and Perceived Parental Involvement: Implications for Parental Involvement in Middle Schools
  • Citing Article
  • November 2008

RMLE Online