Authors :
Charles Omonefe Emore; Anna Onoyase; Grace Akpochafo
Volume/Issue :
Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 7 - July
Google Scholar :
https://tinyurl.com/3zzs3p9b
Scribd :
https://tinyurl.com/ytp6d4ck
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25jul1196
Note : A published paper may take 4-5 working days from the publication date to appear in PlumX Metrics, Semantic Scholar, and ResearchGate.
Note : Google Scholar may take 30 to 40 days to display the article.
Abstract :
This study examined the influence of parenting practices on the social adjustment of secondary school students in
Delta State, with a focus on how variations in parenting practices and students' gender contribute to patterns of adolescent
adjustment. Employing a descriptive survey research design, the study addressed three research questions to assess the
direction of the relationship between the variables. A sample of 370 Senior Secondary Students from the three Senatorial
Districts of the state was utilized using a multi-stage sampling technique. Data were gathered using two research
instruments, one adapted and the other self-constructed for the study. Data were analyzed using SPSS, and Pearson's
product-moment correlation coefficient and multiple regression were utilized to assess the relationship. The study's findings
reveal a very weak and negative relationship between parenting practices and students' social adjustment, suggesting that
the relationship is not statistically significant. The result also reveals that students' social adjustment does not significantly
differ based on the parenting practices they are exposed to as the model summary shows a very weak correlation (R = 0.061)
and an extremely low explained variance (R2 = 0.004) with the ANOVA result confirming that the regression model is not
statistically significant (F (4,365) = 0.340, p = 0.851). In addition, the findings revealed a significant composite effect of
parenting practices and gender on social adjustment (F(7, 361) = 2.361, p = .023), accounting for 4.4% of the variance (R2 =
0.044) in students' social adjustment. However, the individual effect of gender alone (F = 0.052, p = 0.821) was not statistically
significant, indicating that male and female students did not differ significantly in their levels of social adjustment when
considered independently. The study's findings posit that parenting practices, though playing a crucial role in shaping these
students' adjustment, cannot be the sole determinant of students' social adjustment; other contextual or psycho-social
factors may also be at play. The study concludes that parenting practices have a statistically significant but limited influence
on students' social adjustment. It recommends that targeted interventions by parents, educators, counsellors, school-based
mental health professionals, and policy makers be aimed at fostering supportive home environments that enhance
adolescents' social competence and emotional well-being.
Keywords :
Parenting Practices, Social Adjustment, Secondary School Students, Adolescent Development, Gender.
References :
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This study examined the influence of parenting practices on the social adjustment of secondary school students in
Delta State, with a focus on how variations in parenting practices and students' gender contribute to patterns of adolescent
adjustment. Employing a descriptive survey research design, the study addressed three research questions to assess the
direction of the relationship between the variables. A sample of 370 Senior Secondary Students from the three Senatorial
Districts of the state was utilized using a multi-stage sampling technique. Data were gathered using two research
instruments, one adapted and the other self-constructed for the study. Data were analyzed using SPSS, and Pearson's
product-moment correlation coefficient and multiple regression were utilized to assess the relationship. The study's findings
reveal a very weak and negative relationship between parenting practices and students' social adjustment, suggesting that
the relationship is not statistically significant. The result also reveals that students' social adjustment does not significantly
differ based on the parenting practices they are exposed to as the model summary shows a very weak correlation (R = 0.061)
and an extremely low explained variance (R2 = 0.004) with the ANOVA result confirming that the regression model is not
statistically significant (F (4,365) = 0.340, p = 0.851). In addition, the findings revealed a significant composite effect of
parenting practices and gender on social adjustment (F(7, 361) = 2.361, p = .023), accounting for 4.4% of the variance (R2 =
0.044) in students' social adjustment. However, the individual effect of gender alone (F = 0.052, p = 0.821) was not statistically
significant, indicating that male and female students did not differ significantly in their levels of social adjustment when
considered independently. The study's findings posit that parenting practices, though playing a crucial role in shaping these
students' adjustment, cannot be the sole determinant of students' social adjustment; other contextual or psycho-social
factors may also be at play. The study concludes that parenting practices have a statistically significant but limited influence
on students' social adjustment. It recommends that targeted interventions by parents, educators, counsellors, school-based
mental health professionals, and policy makers be aimed at fostering supportive home environments that enhance
adolescents' social competence and emotional well-being.
Keywords :
Parenting Practices, Social Adjustment, Secondary School Students, Adolescent Development, Gender.