Thesis
Primary Author
Antoinette Nneka Opara
Subject Category
Child behavioral response to parenting style
Institutional ID
MIUC-REP-378

Relationship between Child Response Style to Parenting and Psychological Well-Being among Secondary School Students in Owerri, Nigeria.

College Institutional Repository Academic Archive

Abstract

There is global concern about the behaviour and psychological well-being of children in relation to how they respond to parenting. This study examined the
relationship between child response style to parenting and the psychological well-being of secondary school students in Owerri, Nigeria. The study used mixed
methods, specifically the explanatory sequential design to examine the characteristics of the response styles, the levels of psychological well-being and the
relationship that exists between the response styles and psychological well-being. The data for the study was generated using three instruments – the Child Response
Style Scale by Egunjobi (2021) and the Psychological Well-being Scale by Viejo et al. (2018) and seven open - ended questions for focus group discussions. A
descriptive analysis was used for the research questions, with the results presented in tables and figures as frequencies and percentages, mean and standard
deviations, and the summaries presented as Pearson’s (r) correlational coefficient. The findings reveal that the Adherer is the most prevalent (n = 87, 58%) of the
child response styles, high levels of psychological well-being and that there is no relationship between child response style to parenting and psychological well being. The hypothesis result indicated that there is no significant difference between child response styles to parenting and psychological well-being. The study
concluded that the response style to parenting does not predict psychological well-being.

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