Uncovering parental ethnotheories in Türkiye: Parental beliefs and practices linkage.

IF 3.1 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Developmental Psychology Pub Date : 2026-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-07 DOI:10.1037/dev0001967
Nebi Sümer, Feyza Corapci, Fatma Umut Beşpınar
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Abstract

Parental ethnotheories delineate culturally shared beliefs about the nature of children and normative parenting in a particular cultural niche. Using a sequential mixed-methods design, we assessed parental ethnotheories in a non-White, educated, industrialized, rich, and developed cultural context of Türkiye and developed a parental beliefs scale (PBS) with a culturally informed emic approach in two studies. Study 1 relied on semistructured interviews with 125 Turkish parents (79 mothers, 46 fathers) to better understand parents' beliefs on the child's nature and proper parenting with particular attention to the key demographic characteristics reflecting intracultural diversity. This qualitative inquiry informed the generation of items for a PBS about the nature of children and parenting. In Study 2, we investigated the factor structure, measurement invariance, and the predictive power of the PBS on parenting behaviors with a nationally representative sample of 1,397 parents (796 mothers, 601 fathers) of children aged 3-17 years. Factor analysis revealed three factors representing constraining beliefs, autonomy-enabling beliefs, and beliefs in the malleability of the child. Structural and measurement invariance analyses partially supported the equivalence of the three-factor structure across parent and child gender and child age groups. Regression analyses indicated that constraining beliefs strongly and positively predicted psychological control and punitive behaviors. Autonomy-enabling beliefs predicted positive parenting, while malleability beliefs primarily predicted sociocultural control. Parent education and socioeconomic status moderated the effects of parental beliefs on parenting behaviors. The results were discussed based on parents' gender and socioeconomic status within a developing country, exemplifying a culturally informed assessment approach for the majority world. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved).

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揭示父母的民族理论:父母信仰与实践的联系。
父母民族理论描述了文化上对儿童本质的共同信念和特定文化利基中的规范育儿。采用顺序混合方法设计,我们在非白人、受过教育、工业化、富裕和发达的 rkiye文化背景下评估了父母的民族理论,并在两项研究中采用文化信息的emic方法开发了父母信仰量表(PBS)。研究1依赖于对125名土耳其父母(79名母亲,46名父亲)的半结构化访谈,以更好地了解父母对孩子本性和适当养育的信念,特别关注反映文化内多样性的关键人口统计学特征。这一定性调查为PBS关于儿童和养育的性质的项目的生成提供了信息。在研究2中,我们以全国1,397名3-17岁儿童家长(796名母亲,601名父亲)为样本,研究了PBS对养育行为的因素结构、测量不变量和预测能力。因子分析揭示了三个因素分别代表约束信念、自主支持信念和儿童可塑性信念。结构和测量不变性分析部分支持三因素结构在父母和儿童性别和儿童年龄组之间的等效性。回归分析表明,约束信念对心理控制和惩罚行为具有显著的正向预测作用。自主能力信念预测积极的养育方式,而可塑性信念主要预测社会文化控制。父母教育程度和社会经济地位对父母信仰对父母行为的影响有调节作用。根据发展中国家父母的性别和社会经济地位对结果进行了讨论,为大多数国家提供了一种了解文化的评估方法。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
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来源期刊
Developmental Psychology
Developmental Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
2.50%
发文量
329
期刊介绍: Developmental Psychology ® publishes articles that significantly advance knowledge and theory about development across the life span. The journal focuses on seminal empirical contributions. The journal occasionally publishes exceptionally strong scholarly reviews and theoretical or methodological articles. Studies of any aspect of psychological development are appropriate, as are studies of the biological, social, and cultural factors that affect development. The journal welcomes not only laboratory-based experimental studies but studies employing other rigorous methodologies, such as ethnographies, field research, and secondary analyses of large data sets. We especially seek submissions in new areas of inquiry and submissions that will address contradictory findings or controversies in the field as well as the generalizability of extant findings in new populations. Although most articles in this journal address human development, studies of other species are appropriate if they have important implications for human development. Submissions can consist of single manuscripts, proposed sections, or short reports.
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