Options
Relationships Among Parental Self-Efficacy, Home Learning Activities, and Child Skills
Gessulat, Juliane; Kluczniok, Katharina; Oppermann, Elisa; u. a. (2024): Relationships Among Parental Self-Efficacy, Home Learning Activities, and Child Skills, in: Family relations, Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, Jg. 73, Nr. 4, S. 2602–2620, doi: 10.17169/refubium-43195.
Faculty/Chair:
Title of the Journal:
Family relations
ISSN:
1741-3729
0197-6664
Publisher Information:
Year of publication:
2024
Volume:
73
Issue:
4
Pages:
Language:
English
DOI:
Abstract:
Objective:
To investigate relationships among parental self-efficacy, home learning activities, and children's socioemotional and language skills for preschool children.
Background:
Higher parental self-efficacy is often related to better child skills and with more home learning activities. However, the relationships between parental self-efficacy, home learning activities, and children's skills have not yet been investigated.
Method:
The path models draw on data from 727 parents of preschool children (full sample: 85.1% female, 50.9% employed, 24.8% non-German family language) and a subsample of 108 parents of preschool children who soon transition to elementary school in Germany. The self-report data come from the German evaluation study “Language Daycare Centers.”
Results:
We found significant positive links among (a) general parental self-efficacy with home learning activities and children's language skills, (b) language supporting parental self-efficacy with home learning activities and children's socioemotional skills, and (c) a negative link between language supporting parental self-efficacy and children's socioemotional problems.
Conclusion:
The more self-efficacious parents felt, the more often they offered home learning activities and the higher they rated their children's language skills at age 5 years.
Implication:
The findings highlight the importance of parental self-efficacy for engaging with children and the positive parental assessment of children's skills. Promoting parental self-efficacy might stimulate home learning activities and improve the home learning environment.
To investigate relationships among parental self-efficacy, home learning activities, and children's socioemotional and language skills for preschool children.
Background:
Higher parental self-efficacy is often related to better child skills and with more home learning activities. However, the relationships between parental self-efficacy, home learning activities, and children's skills have not yet been investigated.
Method:
The path models draw on data from 727 parents of preschool children (full sample: 85.1% female, 50.9% employed, 24.8% non-German family language) and a subsample of 108 parents of preschool children who soon transition to elementary school in Germany. The self-report data come from the German evaluation study “Language Daycare Centers.”
Results:
We found significant positive links among (a) general parental self-efficacy with home learning activities and children's language skills, (b) language supporting parental self-efficacy with home learning activities and children's socioemotional skills, and (c) a negative link between language supporting parental self-efficacy and children's socioemotional problems.
Conclusion:
The more self-efficacious parents felt, the more often they offered home learning activities and the higher they rated their children's language skills at age 5 years.
Implication:
The findings highlight the importance of parental self-efficacy for engaging with children and the positive parental assessment of children's skills. Promoting parental self-efficacy might stimulate home learning activities and improve the home learning environment.
GND Keywords: ; ;
Lernumwelt
Vorschulkind
Selbstwirksamkeit
Keywords: ; ; ; ;
beliefs
child skills
home environment
preschool self-efficacy
self-efficacy
DDC Classification:
RVK Classification:
Type:
Article
Activation date:
May 7, 2025
Versioning
Question on publication
Permalink
https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/108160