期刊
JOURNAL OF FAMILY STUDIES
卷 28, 期 3, 页码 1095-1107出版社
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13229400.2020.1789494
关键词
Moral values; internalization; motivations; promotion of volitional functioning
This study examined the relationship between adolescents' motivations to internalize moral values and parental promotion of volitional functioning. The results showed that maternal promotion of volitional functioning was significantly and positively associated with identified and integrated motivations for internalizing moral values, regardless of adolescents' gender and age. Implications for the internalization process and parent-adolescent relationships are discussed.
This study analyzed the associations between adolescents' motivations for internalizing moral values and perceived parental (both father's and mother's) promotion of volitional functioning. Based on the Self-Determination Theory, four types of motivations were analyzed: external and introjected motivations, where compliance with values is experienced as being externally controlled or related to a sense of internal obligation; identified and integrated motivations, where values are authentically internalized into the self. Participants were 789 adolescents (54.5% females; 14-19 years) living in Northern Italy. They were asked to complete the Moral Values Internalization Questionnaire and the Autonomy-Support Scale. Results showed that maternal, but not paternal, promotion of volitional functioning was significantly and positively associated with identified and integrated motivations for internalizing moral values, this regardless of adolescents' sex and age. Implications for internalization process and parent-adolescent relationships will be discussed.
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