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ABSTRACT
Starting from a number of core concepts in the theoretical models of selfdetermination theory and self-regulated learning, and based on the results of empirical research, the relations between parental support of learning, behavioral engagement in school activities, strategy use and achievement were put into a complex predictive model that was tested. This study examined the effects of individual differences on parents' autonomy support versus control on academic performance. The results showed that perceptions of parental support for learning involved two pathways: autonomy in learning and a controlled motivation pathway. The first pathway involved a positive relationship of parental autonomy support and autonomous motivation and indicated the importance of the effort and persistence as direct predictors of deep processing. Also, effort and persistence also acted as a mediator between the autonomous motivation and deep processing. The second pathway showed that controlled motivation had a positive effect on procrastination and students' procrastination led to disorganization and implicit low academic performance. The conceptual model and subsequent findings established in this study provide clues for further theoretical development and practical applications concerning the mediating mechanism between parental support for learning and academic performance.
KEYWORDS: psychological control, autonomy, self-determinaton theory, autonomous / control motivation, deep / surfface processing, procrastination
Parent-child relationships (particularly a child's perceptions of these relationships) play an important role in shaping children's adjustment and psychological development, including school related outcomes. One dimension along which to consider this issue is the degree to which parents related with their children in a way that supports children's autonomy rather than controlling their behavior (Grolnick, 2002). Building on previous work on parenting practice, Grolnick, Deci, and Ryan (1997) found that parental autonomy support and parental control are two important dimensions for predicting children's self-reports of autonomous selfregulation, competence and achievement.
The study of the autonomy support is a particularly important topic in current research on parenting. Although past research usually aggregated parenting dimensions in parenting typologies such as authoritarian or permissive, recent research witnesses a renewed interest in the specific effects of the autonomy support vs. psychological control dimension (Barber, 1996; Gray & Steinberg, 1999).
Parental autonomy support is conceptualized as the extent to which parent's value and encourages children's independent problem solving, choice, and participation in decisions, rather...