Perceived Parental Career Expectation and Adolescent Career Development: The Mediating Role of Adolescent Career-Planning and Goal-Setting Self-Efficacy and the Moderating Role of Perceived Parent-Adolescent Career Congruence

The underlying mechanisms (i.e., linking and conditioning mechanisms) in the association between perceived parental career expectation and adolescents' career development remain understudied. Under the guidance of the social cognitive career theory, this study used three-wave longitudinal data...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of counseling psychology 2024-11, Vol.71 (6), p.621-632
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description The underlying mechanisms (i.e., linking and conditioning mechanisms) in the association between perceived parental career expectation and adolescents' career development remain understudied. Under the guidance of the social cognitive career theory, this study used three-wave longitudinal data from 3,196 Chinese adolescents (Mage = 15.55 years old, SD = .44; 52.8% girls at Wave 1) to fill such gaps. Results indicate conditional indirect effects. Specifically, the indirect association of perceived parental career expectation with adolescents' career adaptability and ambivalence via adolescents' career-planning and goal-setting self-efficacy was stronger when perceived parent-adolescent career congruence was higher than that when perceived parent-adolescent career congruence was lower. Such effects were identified even after various career-related parenting practices were controlled for. Implications for theory, future research and interventions were also discussed. Public Significance Statement Findings of this study suggest the importance of enhancing adolescents' perceived congruence between parents and adolescents in terms of child career interests, goals, and plans and promoting adolescents' confidence in achieving future career success to prepare them well for the job market. Overall, this study yields empirical evidence supporting the critical roles of family influences and the consistently acknowledged effect of career-planning and goal-setting self-efficacy for adolescents' career development, particularly in the Chinese culture context.
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Under the guidance of the social cognitive career theory, this study used three-wave longitudinal data from 3,196 Chinese adolescents (Mage = 15.55 years old, SD = .44; 52.8% girls at Wave 1) to fill such gaps. Results indicate conditional indirect effects. Specifically, the indirect association of perceived parental career expectation with adolescents' career adaptability and ambivalence via adolescents' career-planning and goal-setting self-efficacy was stronger when perceived parent-adolescent career congruence was higher than that when perceived parent-adolescent career congruence was lower. Such effects were identified even after various career-related parenting practices were controlled for. Implications for theory, future research and interventions were also discussed. Public Significance Statement Findings of this study suggest the importance of enhancing adolescents' perceived congruence between parents and adolescents in terms of child career interests, goals, and plans and promoting adolescents' confidence in achieving future career success to prepare them well for the job market. 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source EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Adolescent Attitudes
Adolescent Development
Adolescents
Ambivalence
Career Development
Conditioning
Congruence
Female
Goal Setting
Human
Indirect effects
Male
Parent Child Relations
Parental Expectations
Parents & parenting
Self-Efficacy
title Perceived Parental Career Expectation and Adolescent Career Development: The Mediating Role of Adolescent Career-Planning and Goal-Setting Self-Efficacy and the Moderating Role of Perceived Parent-Adolescent Career Congruence
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