Psychometric properties of the maternal and paternal parenting styles scale in chilean adolescents
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Date
Authors
Gálvez-Nieto, José Luis
Polanco-Levican, Karina
Navarro-Aburto, Braulio Ademir
Polanco-Levican, Karina
Navarro-Aburto, Braulio Ademir
Authors
Date
Datos de publicación:
10.3390/ijerph18126229
Keywords
Parental Socialization - Parenting Styles - Psychometric Properties - Adolescence - Maternal Health - Parental Care - Paternal Care - Psychology - Public Health - Social Behavior - Adolescent - Article - Child Parent Relation - Chile - Chilean - Cross-sectional Study - Female - Human - Human Experiment - Human Tissue - Major Clinical Study - Male - Probability Sample - Socialization - Adult - Father - Psychometry - Adolescent - Adult - Cross-sectional Studies - Fathers - Female - Humans - Male - Parenting - Psychometrics
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Abstract
Parenting style has been related to a series of positive outcomes that extend into adulthood. The aim of this study was to analyze the psychometric properties of the maternal and paternal parenting styles scale (PSS-MP) in a sample of adolescents. A cross-sectional design was used, with a probability sample of 2683 adolescents (48.8% women) from 32 public, private, and subsidized schools in Chile. In total, four confirmatory factor models were contrasted, which was the best fit to support the originally proposed six-correlated factor structure. The factor invariance analysis reflected that the metric equivalence according to sex is present at the level of scale invariance. It is concluded that the abbreviated version of the PSS-MP provides sufficient evidence for use in the Chilean adolescent population. © 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Parental Socialization , Parenting Styles , Psychometric Properties , Adolescence , Maternal Health , Parental Care , Paternal Care , Psychology , Public Health , Social Behavior , Adolescent , Article , Child Parent Relation , Chile , Chilean , Cross-sectional Study , Female , Human , Human Experiment , Human Tissue , Major Clinical Study , Male , Probability Sample , Socialization , Adult , Father , Psychometry , Adolescent , Adult , Cross-sectional Studies , Fathers , Female , Humans , Male , Parenting , Psychometrics
Citation
10.3390/ijerph18126229
