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      Test Anxiety and Academic Performance in Undergraduate and Graduate Students.

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          The relation of parenting style to adolescent school performance.

          This article develops and tests a reformation of Baumrind's typology of authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative parenting styles in the context of adolescent school performance. Using a large and diverse sample of San Francisco Bay Area high school students (N = 7,836), we found that both authoritarian and permissive parenting styles were negatively associated with grades, and authoritative parenting was positively associated with grades. Parenting styles generally showed the expected relation to grades across gender, age, parental education, ethnic, and family structure categories. Authoritarian parenting tended to have a stronger association with grades than did the other 2 parenting styles, except among Hispanic males. The full typology best predicted grades among white students. Pure authoritative families (high on authoritative but not high on the other 2 indices) had the highest mean grades, while inconsistent families that combine authoritarian parenting with other parenting styles had the lowest grades.
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            Over-time changes in adjustment and competence among adolescents from authoritative, authoritarian, indulgent, and neglectful families.

            In a previous report, we demonstrated that adolescents' adjustment varies as a function of their parents' style (e.g., authoritative, authoritarian, indulgent, neglectful). This 1-year follow-up was conducted in order to examine whether the observed differences are maintained over time. In 1987, an ethnically and socioeconomically heterogeneous sample of approximately 2,300 14-18-year-olds provided information used to classify the adolescents' families into 1 of 4 parenting style groups. That year, and again 1 year later, the students completed a battery of standardized instruments tapping psychosocial development, school achievement, internalized distress, and behavior problems. Differences in adjustment associated with variations in parenting are either maintained or increase over time. However, whereas the benefits of authoritative parenting are largely in the maintenance of previous levels of high adjustment, the deleterious consequences of neglectful parenting continue to accumulate.
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              Test anxiety and direction of attention.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Educational Psychology
                Journal of Educational Psychology
                American Psychological Association (APA)
                1939-2176
                0022-0663
                2005
                2005
                : 97
                : 2
                : 268-274
                Article
                10.1037/0022-0663.97.2.268
                12bf0866-8ec3-4372-9c29-955584cb206d
                © 2005
                History

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