Artículos de revistas
Predictive Power of Parenting Styles on Children's Social Skills: A Brazilian Sample
Fecha
2016-04-01Registro en:
Sage Open. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications Inc, v. 6, n. 2, 7 p., 2016.
2158-2440
10.1177/2158244016638393
WOS:000380352000010
WOS000380352000010.pdf
9998824647536109
0000-0002-5669-5425
Autor
Ctr Univ Fundacao Inst Ensino Osasco
Ctr Estudos Psicol
Fac Atibaia
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between parenting styles and children's social skills, establishing significant correlations between those two constructs. A total of 202 children, 7 to 10 years old, male and female, attending second to fourth year of government schools in SAo Paulo, Brazil, were participants of this research. They collectively completed Children's Social Skills Test (THAS-C) and Parental Styles Inventory (IEP). Results suggest that positive parental styles are predictors of altruism, while negative parental styles are predictors of assertiveness, conversation, and social confidence. Regarding general social skills, variables that offered the best probable model were positive monitoring, lax discipline, moral behavior, and physical abuse (the higher the general social skill, the lesser the abusive parenting styles). As a conclusion, it seems that different social skills are related to positive and negative parenting styles, reinforcing the idea of a social skill as an attribute of behavior.