The purpose of this study was to clarify equivocal findings in the parent-involvement literature and examine novel interactions in a New Zealand context. Specifically, this study tested direct effects of school year, parent education, family structure, and child gender on parent involvement in elementary school. In addition, interactions between parent, family, and child characteristics were explored as moderators on the relation of school year and parent involvement. Participants were 421 primary caregivers of children attending their first through final years of elementary school on New Zealand’s South Island. Structural equation models were used to detect direct and interaction effects. Findings revealed statistically significant direct effects for several parent, family, and child characteristics examined. No interaction effects were found. Implications and future research directions are discussed.
-
-
Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
-
A Multidimensional Examination of Parent Involvement across Child and Parent Characteristics
S. Andrew Garbacz,
University of Oregon
Philippa S. McDowall and Elizabeth Schaughency,
University of Otago
Susan M. Sheridan and Greg W. Welch
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
ARTICLE CITATION
S. Andrew Garbacz, Philippa S. McDowall, Elizabeth Schaughency, Susan M. Sheridan, and Greg W. Welch, "A Multidimensional Examination of Parent Involvement across Child and Parent Characteristics," The Elementary School Journal 115, no. 3 (March 2015): 384-406.
MOST READ
Of all published articles, the following were the most read within the past 12 months
-
-
Silverman et al.
-
Dewey
-
Van Steenbrugge et al.
-
Manny



