Development and Validation of a Questionnaire on Chinese Parents’ Beliefs in Parental Roles and Responsibilities
Ching Man Lam (),
Siu Ming To () and
Wai Man Kwong ()
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Ching Man Lam: The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Siu Ming To: The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Wai Man Kwong: City University of Hong Kong
Applied Research in Quality of Life, 2020, vol. 15, issue 3, No 5, 693-712
Abstract:
Abstract Parental beliefs concerning parental roles and responsibilities are a crucial domain in the study of parental cognitions, an emic measure of which is not available in Chinese societies. In the context of a mixed-methods study on generational shifts in parental beliefs of five cohorts of Chinese parents in Hong Kong, we developed and validated a culturally- and diachronically-sensitive quantitative measure of parental beliefs on parental roles and responsibilities. A non-random proportionate sample (N = 5,707) of 5 generational cohorts of parents (the earliest cohort being parents of young children in the 1970’s and before) responded to a questionnaire of parental beliefs. An exploratory factor analysis of the data collected from the first sub-sample (n = 2,925) yielded a 23-item fivefold factor structure. A confirmatory factor analysis of the data collected from the second sub-sample (n = 2,596) demonstrated an acceptable model fit. The discovered factors pointed to parental beliefs clustered around five sets of parental roles and responsibilities: (1) parental nurturance of children; (2) parenthood as a normative life stage; (3) parental guidance of the young; (4) fulfilling children’s needs; and (5) readiness to relax and restrict parental control. Cross-cohort analysis confirms the presence of significant generational differences in all 5 sets of parental beliefs. This emic quantitative measure provides a culturally-sensitive scale for studying parental beliefs about parental roles and responsibilities in a Chinese cultural context.
Keywords: Parental beliefs; Parenting; Chinese; Scale development; Scale validation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1007/s11482-018-9682-4
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