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Family Correlates of Adolescent Self-Monitoring and Social Competence
Authors:Carol J. Schoenrock  Nancy J. Bell  Sheh-Wei Sun  Arthur W. Avery
Affiliation:1. Horizons Family Center , Lubbock, TX;2. Department of Human Development and Family Studies , Texas Tech University;3. Department of Sociology and Social Work , National Chung-Hsing University , Taipei, Taiwan;4. College of Human Sciences Auburn University
Abstract:The purpose of this study was to investigate linkages between adolescent self-monitoring, global social competence, and parenting and family environment dimensions of support and encouragement of autonomy. The sample consisted of 233 young women and 199 young men at 2 southwestern universities. The primary measures used were the Family Environment Scale (R. H. Moos, 1981), the Parent Behavior Form (L. Worell & J. Worell, 1974), the revised Self-Monitoring Scale (M. Snyder, 1987), and the Texas Social Behavior Inventory (R. Helmreich, J. Stapp, & C. Ervin, 1974). Findings indicated that family variables are more strongly associated with social competence than with self-monitoring; family support was, overall, a more important ingredient of social competence than was autonomy. Women and men had different patterns of associations among specific variables.
Keywords:age  death anxiety  dual-process model  health-promoting behaviors  terror-management theory
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