A model of parental achievement-oriented psychological control in academically gifted students

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Abstract

This study investigated achievement-oriented parent socialization as it pertains to school avoidance in a sample of gifted students. A serial mediation model examining relationships among parental achievement-oriented psychological control (APC), fear of academic failure, academic amotivation, and school avoidance was tested. The sample included 230 gifted youth (Mage = 13.36; SD = 1.67) involved in summer programming. After factor structure and internal consistency of the instruments were confirmed, separate mediation models were analyzed for mother and father psychological control. In both models, bootstrap evidence supported the indirect relationship between parental APC and school avoidance (R2 = .29 mother/.29 father) through fear of academic failure (R2 = .18/.17) and academic amotivation (R2 = .10/.08). Many researchers of parental socialization and motivation focus on the brighter side of being gifted. Findings of this study follow a darker path of controlling socialization and avoidance-based psychological constructs that create problems in a subset of gifted students.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)105-116
Number of pages12
JournalHigh Ability Studies
Volume26
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2 2015
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 European Council for High Ability.

Keywords

  • academic amotivation
  • fear of academic failure
  • psychological control
  • school avoidance

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