2020
DOI: 10.15408/tazkiya.v8i1.14723
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Self-Dicslosure dan Parental Monitoring: Model Mediasi dengan Parental Knowledge

Abstract: Self-disclosure is an individual's actions to share information about himself to others, whether it is private, less intimate or even everyday information. Adolescent with the development of personal space sometimes need distance and keep many secrets from their parents, and tend to be more open to friends. Parents who are worried about the child's social and personal life will do parental monitoring. Parental monitoring efforts are partly influenced by the social signals displayed by children, meaning that th… Show more

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(2 citation statements)
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“…With the inclusion of a qualitative study interviewing 37 parents as well as adolescent children aged 12-19 years, Adi (42) reveals that the majority of the parent participants understood the online risk yet did not immediately drive efforts to protect their children, such as advising along with active supervision. Sani et al (32) revealed that a child's self-disclosure contributes to parental knowledge only if the child voluntarily shares private and con dential information to encourage optimal parental monitoring. The results of previous research on parental monitoring in the Indonesian context still use regression analysis techniques or qualitative approaches, so we hope this current study will ll the gap to re-evaluate the concept and construct of parental monitoring, especially for digital activities of school-age children by utilizing more sophisticated techniques, such as factor analysis.…”
Section: Parental Monitoring Instrumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…With the inclusion of a qualitative study interviewing 37 parents as well as adolescent children aged 12-19 years, Adi (42) reveals that the majority of the parent participants understood the online risk yet did not immediately drive efforts to protect their children, such as advising along with active supervision. Sani et al (32) revealed that a child's self-disclosure contributes to parental knowledge only if the child voluntarily shares private and con dential information to encourage optimal parental monitoring. The results of previous research on parental monitoring in the Indonesian context still use regression analysis techniques or qualitative approaches, so we hope this current study will ll the gap to re-evaluate the concept and construct of parental monitoring, especially for digital activities of school-age children by utilizing more sophisticated techniques, such as factor analysis.…”
Section: Parental Monitoring Instrumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parents of elementary school-age children in Indonesia may adapt conventional parenting practices to be harmonious with their children's cyber activity. The parental monitoring practices in digital activities involving Indonesian parents share the common parental monitoring concept, for example, child disclosure, parental knowledge, and parental solicitation (30)(31)(32). Nevertheless, Indonesian parental monitoring practices also have the distinctive element, such as parents applying parental knowledge in a hierarchic style of communication (i.e., parents are giving advice for their child, or in Indonesian it is called menasihati) (33).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%