民族
情感支持
社会支持
心理学
生活满意度
发展心理学
人口学
医学
社会心理学
社会学
人类学
作者
Karen L. Fingerman,Yen‐Pi Cheng,Eric D. Wesselmann,Steven H. Zarit,Frank F. Furstenberg,Kira S. Birditt
标识
DOI:10.1111/j.1741-3737.2012.00987.x
摘要
Popular media describe adverse effects of helicopter parents who provide intense support to grown children, but few studies have examined implications of such intense support. Grown children ( N = 592 , M age = 23.82 years, 53% female, 35% members of racial/ethnic minority groups) and their parents ( N = 399, M age = 50.67 years, 52% female; 34% members of racial/ethnic minority groups) reported on the support they exchanged with one another. Intense support involved parents' providing several types of support (e.g., financial, advice, emotional) many times a week. Parents and grown children who engaged in such frequent support viewed it as nonnormative (i.e., too much support), but grown children who received intense support reported better psychological adjustment and life satisfaction than grown children who did not receive intense support. Parents who perceived their grown children as needing too much support reported poorer life satisfaction. The discussion focuses on generational differences in the implications of intense parental involvement during young adulthood.
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