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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The longitudinal relations among dimensions of parenting styles, sympathy, prosocial moral reasoning, and prosocial behaviors
Ana TurBrian E. ArmentaMaría Vicenta MestrePaula SamperGustavo Carlosubject
Social PsychologyChild rearingmedia_common.quotation_subjectPersonal distressPoison controlEmpathyMoral reasoninghumanitiesEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental NeuroscienceProsocial behaviorMoral developmentDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyParenting stylesLife-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologySocial psychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commondescription
Developmental scholars assert that parents are important in fostering prosocial behaviors in adolescents, but longitudinal investigations on this topic are limited. Participants consisted of 372 boys and 358 girls with a mean age of 10.84 years (SD = 1.57) at Wave 1 from a mostly middle class community in Spain. Across three successive years, participants completed measures of fathers’ and mothers’ warmth and strict control, sympathy, prosocial moral reasoning, and self- and peer-reported prosocial behaviors. Results showed that parental warmth, sympathy, and prosocial moral reasoning were predictive of prosocial behaviors. Further analyses showed bidirectional effects such that early prosocial behaviors predicted later parenting and adolescents’ prosociality. Findings lend support to cognitive-developmental and moral internalization models of prosocial development.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-09-24 | International Journal of Behavioral Development |