TY - JOUR
T1 - A critical look at parenting research from the mainstream
T2 - Problems uncovered while adapting western research to non-western cultures
AU - Stewart, Sunita Mahtani
AU - Bond, Michael Harris
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2012 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2002/9
Y1 - 2002/9
N2 - Although there is some consensus among theorists regarding attributes of parents that associate with optimal child outcomes, translation of the theory into measures has been variable and inconsistent. These inconsistencies have been surprisingly little noted in the literature and present a particular problem to researchers seeking to study parenting in little examined cultures. This article describes these inconsistencies, and suggests some practical resolutions based on the writers' recent experience of studying parenting in Islamic cultures. Some dilemmas and choice points described are: the use of typologies vs. dimensions; measures of parenting styles vs. practices; the limited number of items in most current scales of 'style' as opposed to 'practice' domains; strategies to assess the validity of parenting practices when the culture-specific 'meaning' of the behaviour is not known; and the implications of the greater degree of gender differentiation in cultures studied. Steps proposed as criteria for assembling scales and determining psychometric acceptability when adapting measures to new cultures are outlined. It is the goal of this article to raise discussion both about the inconsistencies and lack of standardization of measures in the study of parenting, and about guidelines for future studies charting new territory. Such discussion is timely as developmental psychology takes on an increasingly global perspective.
AB - Although there is some consensus among theorists regarding attributes of parents that associate with optimal child outcomes, translation of the theory into measures has been variable and inconsistent. These inconsistencies have been surprisingly little noted in the literature and present a particular problem to researchers seeking to study parenting in little examined cultures. This article describes these inconsistencies, and suggests some practical resolutions based on the writers' recent experience of studying parenting in Islamic cultures. Some dilemmas and choice points described are: the use of typologies vs. dimensions; measures of parenting styles vs. practices; the limited number of items in most current scales of 'style' as opposed to 'practice' domains; strategies to assess the validity of parenting practices when the culture-specific 'meaning' of the behaviour is not known; and the implications of the greater degree of gender differentiation in cultures studied. Steps proposed as criteria for assembling scales and determining psychometric acceptability when adapting measures to new cultures are outlined. It is the goal of this article to raise discussion both about the inconsistencies and lack of standardization of measures in the study of parenting, and about guidelines for future studies charting new territory. Such discussion is timely as developmental psychology takes on an increasingly global perspective.
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U2 - 10.1348/026151002320620389
DO - 10.1348/026151002320620389
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:0036042820
SN - 0261-510X
VL - 20
SP - 379
EP - 392
JO - British Journal of Developmental Psychology
JF - British Journal of Developmental Psychology
IS - 3
ER -