R12 Answers PSYO 353
R12 Answers PSYO 353
R12 Answers PSYO 353
1. Describe the typical changes that adolescents go through with respect to sexuality.
They have their first relational and sexual experiences, have to learn what they like and dislike, how to make
sexual experiences mutually rewarding, and how to prevent potentially negative consequences of having sex.
3. Describe the sample of studies used in this literature review. [NOTE: I do NOT expect you to have know
the details of the individual studies provided in Table 1.]
Searched studies with keywords regarding parents, parental style, communication etc..
- Only empirical studies used focusing on adolescents or emerging adults (age 12–25), carried out in N.A ,
Western Europe, Australia, or NZ.
- Only studies published in 1990 or there after were included
- Excluded studies with sample sizes smaller than 200
- 55 studies used total
4. Provide a clear and complete description of how the authors define (a) support, (b) control, and (c)
parental knowledge as well as how each is measured in the literature.
Support – the expression of affection, love, and appreciation; it encompasses warmth, availability,
responsiveness, and closeness. Measurements:
- involvement, usually measured as the amount of time parents and children spend together
- the perceived quality of or satisfaction with the relationship with the parents.
Control – parenting behavior that is intended to direct the child’s behavior in the manner desired by the
parents. Measurements:
- The number of rules parents set for their children
- The level of autonomy children are granted
- The child’s involvement in making decisions, and (perceived) strictness
Parental knowledge (monitoring) – knowledge of the child’s where abouts (doesn’t require supervision
- child has to cooperate a little bit for parents to obtain this knowledge (if child is unsupervised). Knowledge
often d/t child’s spontaneous disclosure of where they will be.
o interpersonal variable, not a parental variable.
5. What are the three aspects of sexuality that this paper examines with respect to the dimensions of
parenting?
- sexual experience
- use of protection (i.e., contraception and condoms)
- quality of sexual experiences (i.e., positive feelings regarding sexuality and competence in sexual
interactions)
6. What is the relationship between parental support and sexual experience? [NOTE: I expect you to grasp
the nuanced version of this question and subsequent questions about the relationships—there are multiple
aspects to this and the other relationships described.]
↑parental support is associated with a delay of first sexual intercourse.
↑parental support precede relatively little sexual experience
- parental support/intercourse experience is stronger in the youngest age groups
- stronger associations for girls > boys.
7. What is the relationship between parental support and the use of contraception protection? Condom
use?
- young people use contraception more consistently if they are more satisfied with the maternal relationship
or if they experience more support, involvement in school, or positive communication styles from their
parents.
- ↓likelihood of pregnancy for girls reporting a relatively warm family climate.
- negative association b/w parental support (spending much time together, having fun) and ‘‘sexual risk
behavior’’ (multiple, promiscuous, or casual partners without condoms).
- girls who can talk to their mother about important things use condoms more consistently before age 18
8. What is the relationship between parental support and pleasurable sexual experiences?
- Dutch girls are ↑ satisfied with their sex lives when they receive more parental support.
- Associations b/w uncommunicative parents and girls’ feelings of guilt after first sexual intercourse.
- Young people who perceive their parents as more affectionate seem to be more capable of feeling close,
(safe) sex, and refusing unwanted sexual contact in sexual interactions.
9. How is control operationalized defined and how does this impact the nature of the relationship between
control and sexual experience?
↑control = ↓permissiveness, ↑supervision, and parents perceived as ↑strict
↓control = ↑permissiveness, ↓supervision, and parents perceived as ↓strict
10. What is the relationship between control and safe sex behaviour?
- A certain amount of rules or parental input in decision making seems to be beneficial. But a certain amount
of autonomy is also beneficial.
- Male adolescents who perceive the father as more strict use condoms more consistently
- (-) association between permissive parenting and contraceptive use in female adolescents
- young people use condoms more consistently if they are allowed to spend more unsupervised time with
peers.
12. What is the relationship between parental knowledge of the child’s whereabouts and
sexual experience?
Unlike control, higher levels of parental knowledge are unambiguously related to adolescents’ sexual
behavior.
young people who informed their parents of their whereabouts at ages 11–13 were less sexually experienced
when they reached age 15–17.
( - ) association between the level of parental knowledge at age 13 and the number of sexual partners at age
16 or 17.
13. What are the relationships between parental knowledge of the child’s whereabouts and the use of
protection?
- young people whose parents know more about their whereabouts use condoms more consistently and/or
have lower scores on measures of sexual risk behavior
- higher levels of knowledge are associated with more consistent contraceptive use and lower odds of
unwanted pregnancy
14. What is the relationship between parental knowledge of the child’s whereabouts and pleasurable sexual
experiences?
- Young adolescents who perceive the timing of their first sexual experiences as ‘‘just right’’ report that
their parents know more about them
- ↑ lvls of parental knowledge correlate with ↑ levels of satisfaction, assertiveness, and self-confidence in
sexual interactions and lower odds of unwanted sexual activity
15. What is the concern raised by “very young children” (14 yrs) having sexual intercourse?
Sexual intercourse at this age is more often the result of persuasion or coercion and more often unprotected
than among older adolescents
16. What possible explanations are provided for the associations with parental control and support that
were found?
adolescents who are close to their parents and who perceive their rules as fair are more inclined to live up to
their parents’ wishes
higher levels of support and authoritative control create psychologically healthy young people
(+) relation between parental support and self-esteem or adequate social skills has been demonstrated in
earlier research. As a result, young people who grow up in loving and supportive families could be more aware
of their own needs and more able to express them adequately in social relationships.
17. What do the authors mean by reciprocal explanations? What evidence is there with respect this
approach?
Parents aren’t just behaving a way to dictate their child’s behavior, but the child’s behavior actually has an
impact on the parents and how they behave towards their children.
the relationship between parents and children could also deteriorate as a result of children becoming sexually
active.
Parents unconsciously blame their children for not living up to their expectations, or perhaps it is just a natural
reaction to a sign that the child is approaching adulthood. An explanation for the decline in parental
knowledge could be that children who do things that their parents might not like (like having sexual inter-
course) have a lower tendency to self-disclose
- support and control set the basis for parental knowledge, which in turn has its effect on sexual behavior.
- Knowledge and sexual behavior are both responses to the right amounts of support and control, but not
interrelated. In this case, the correlation between knowledge and sexual behavior and sexual health is
spurious.
R12: Parenting and adolescents’ sexual development in western societies: a literature review