2016
DOI: 10.1111/famp.12266
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Acculturation Conflict, Cultural Parenting Self‐Efficacy, and Perceived Parenting Competence in Asian American and Latino/a Families

Abstract: Parents from immigrant backgrounds must deal with normative parenting demands as well as unique challenges associated with acculturation processes. The current study examines the independent and interactive influences of acculturation conflict and cultural parenting self-efficacy (PSE; e.g., parents' confidence in instilling heritage, American, and bicultural values in their children) on perceptions of general parenting competence. Using data from 58 Asian American and 153 Latin American parents of children in… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

1
73
0
3

Year Published

2018
2018
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
5
3

Relationship

1
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 66 publications
(85 citation statements)
references
References 54 publications
(98 reference statements)
1
73
0
3
Order By: Relevance
“…Parents often struggle with how best to deliver RES messages (Coard et al., ), especially when these conversations may also raise parental affect in discussions about discrimination. Cultural parental self‐efficacy is a new construct that is defined as “the extent to which parents believe they can effectively instill cultural knowledge, values, and pride in their children” (Kiang, Glatz, & Buchanan, , p. 4). In this initial study with Latinx and Asian parents, cultural parental self‐efficacy predicted general parenting competence in Latinx but not Asian parents, which the authors attributed potentially due to generational differences in their sample or unique experiences of discrimination in Asian groups (Kiang et al., ).…”
Section: Res and Parenting Adolescentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Parents often struggle with how best to deliver RES messages (Coard et al., ), especially when these conversations may also raise parental affect in discussions about discrimination. Cultural parental self‐efficacy is a new construct that is defined as “the extent to which parents believe they can effectively instill cultural knowledge, values, and pride in their children” (Kiang, Glatz, & Buchanan, , p. 4). In this initial study with Latinx and Asian parents, cultural parental self‐efficacy predicted general parenting competence in Latinx but not Asian parents, which the authors attributed potentially due to generational differences in their sample or unique experiences of discrimination in Asian groups (Kiang et al., ).…”
Section: Res and Parenting Adolescentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cultural parental self‐efficacy is a new construct that is defined as “the extent to which parents believe they can effectively instill cultural knowledge, values, and pride in their children” (Kiang, Glatz, & Buchanan, , p. 4). In this initial study with Latinx and Asian parents, cultural parental self‐efficacy predicted general parenting competence in Latinx but not Asian parents, which the authors attributed potentially due to generational differences in their sample or unique experiences of discrimination in Asian groups (Kiang et al., ). This is an important first step in studying a critical construct that likely influences how RES messages are delivered by parents and ultimately understood by youth.…”
Section: Res and Parenting Adolescentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(, in this issue) argue that cultural socialization (in particular) is about much more than the singular messages that parents offer their children. For example, these authors describe cultural parental self‐efficacy as a novel parenting skill, involving “the extent to which parents believe that they can effectively instill cultural knowledge, values, and pride in their children” (Kiang, Glatz, & Buchanan, , p. 4).…”
Section: What Can We Learn About Helping Children To Navigate An Incrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The process of acculturation comes with the gradual loss of protective factors from the culture of origin and the increased exposure to stressors that immigrants are not yet prepared to handle, such as acculturative stress, perceived discrimination and experience of racism, as well as minority status (Escobar & Vega, ). Additionally, given that the majority of Chinese‐American adults are foreign‐born (Pew Research Center, ), the different acculturation rates between Chinese‐American children and their foreign‐born parents can lead to intergenerational cultural conflicts within the family, which can further result in negative outcomes, such as lower parenting self‐efficacy and perceived parenting competence (Kiang, Glatz, & Buchanan, ) as well as more internalizing problems and lower adaptive functioning skills in children (Lui, ). Simultaneously, acculturative stress may also benefit individuals by increasing their empathy level toward people from other cultural backgrounds (Wei, Li, Wang, & Ko, ).…”
Section: A Profile For Chinese‐american Students and Familiesmentioning
confidence: 99%