Father Involvement and Father-Child Attachment Security and Its Relation to Self-Beliefs, Sense of School Belongingness and Academic Achievement Among Turkish University Students
(2019) PSYP02 20191Department of Psychology
- Abstract
- Despite some evidence that the father’s role is particularly crucial for the child’s academic experiences and performance, only a few studies have examined influences of father involvement and the child’s attachment security on the child’s self-beliefs, sense of school belongingness and academic achievement, and the focus has been mostly on Western cultures. The present study investigated these links in Turkish university students, also looking at the potential relationship between father-child attachment security and academic self-efficacy and achievement. Students (N=192) completed a narrative-based method for assessing attachment scripts and an online questionnaire for the assessment of academic belongingness, self-efficacy and... (More)
- Despite some evidence that the father’s role is particularly crucial for the child’s academic experiences and performance, only a few studies have examined influences of father involvement and the child’s attachment security on the child’s self-beliefs, sense of school belongingness and academic achievement, and the focus has been mostly on Western cultures. The present study investigated these links in Turkish university students, also looking at the potential relationship between father-child attachment security and academic self-efficacy and achievement. Students (N=192) completed a narrative-based method for assessing attachment scripts and an online questionnaire for the assessment of academic belongingness, self-efficacy and achievement. Results showed that father involvement during childhood was associated with self-esteem and sense of school belongingness in university years. However, father involvement in childhood was not related to attachment, and thus, attachment security did not mediate the relationship between father involvement in childhood and academic success in university. The self-report method for measuring academic self-efficacy and success may be a considerable limitation in the study. Nonetheless, findings highlight the importance of fathering behaviours during childhood for academic experiences and achievement also in early adulthood and extend the literature by contributing non-Western data. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8994581
- author
- Yurtsever, Tugce LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- PSYP02 20191
- year
- 2019
- type
- H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
- subject
- keywords
- Father involvement, attachment, secure base script, sense of school belongingness, self-esteem, academic self-efficacy, academic achievement, university students
- language
- English
- id
- 8994581
- date added to LUP
- 2019-09-11 08:43:28
- date last changed
- 2019-09-11 08:43:28
@misc{8994581, abstract = {{Despite some evidence that the father’s role is particularly crucial for the child’s academic experiences and performance, only a few studies have examined influences of father involvement and the child’s attachment security on the child’s self-beliefs, sense of school belongingness and academic achievement, and the focus has been mostly on Western cultures. The present study investigated these links in Turkish university students, also looking at the potential relationship between father-child attachment security and academic self-efficacy and achievement. Students (N=192) completed a narrative-based method for assessing attachment scripts and an online questionnaire for the assessment of academic belongingness, self-efficacy and achievement. Results showed that father involvement during childhood was associated with self-esteem and sense of school belongingness in university years. However, father involvement in childhood was not related to attachment, and thus, attachment security did not mediate the relationship between father involvement in childhood and academic success in university. The self-report method for measuring academic self-efficacy and success may be a considerable limitation in the study. Nonetheless, findings highlight the importance of fathering behaviours during childhood for academic experiences and achievement also in early adulthood and extend the literature by contributing non-Western data.}}, author = {{Yurtsever, Tugce}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Father Involvement and Father-Child Attachment Security and Its Relation to Self-Beliefs, Sense of School Belongingness and Academic Achievement Among Turkish University Students}}, year = {{2019}}, }