Abstract

During the past four decades, China has gone through rapid urbanization and modernization. As people adapt to dramatic sociodemographic shifts from rural communities to urban centers and as economic level rises, individualistic cultural values in China have increased. Meanwhile, parent and child behavior in early childhood has also evolved accordingly to match a more individualistic society. This mixed-method study investigated how social change in China may have impacted parenting goals and child development in middle childhood, as seen through the eyes of the current generation of mothers. Thirty mothers of fifth-grade elementary school students from Shenzhen, China were recruited and took part in semi-structured interviews. Participants answered questions and provided examples about their children’s life, their own childhood, and the perceived differences between the two generations. Participating mothers were also asked to rate which generation, themselves or their parents, cared more about the childrearing goals of academic competitiveness and socioemotional well-being. Using both qualitative and quantitative analysis, we expected and found an intergenerational increase in the perceived value mothers placed on individualistic traits: current mothers care more about their children’s academic competitiveness, personal happiness, and social adjustment, compared to their experience of their own mothers’ attitudes during their childhood a generation earlier. They also experience conflict between their children’s academic competitiveness and socioemotional well-being. As a function of both urbanization and increased economic means, children’s collectivistic family responsibilities for essential household chores have declined as the importance of schoolwork has increased.

Highlights

  • Mothering is a set of cultural practices that reflect values and norms consistent with and adaptive to the surrounding ecology

  • Mother #4 stated that if her child was responding negatively toward schoolwork, she would explain to him the necessity to finish his school assignments, while letting him stop working on extracurricular assignment

  • Mothers saw that Chinese society had shifted and different developmental goals had become relevant: for example, Mother #2 said “I think [academic competitiveness] should be quite important, because children will graduate in the future and if they do not have this ability to compete, entering the society after graduation will be quite like that.”

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Mothering is a set of cultural practices that reflect values and norms consistent with and adaptive to the surrounding ecology. Intergenerational Shifts in Children’s Activities Hypothesis 11: In adapting to more Gesellschaft environments in the current generation (e.g., urbanization, more technology, greater economic resources), children will lose activities that contribute to family subsistence; these tasks will be replaced by school-related activities such as homework. This is an issue that is highlighted in an indigenous Maya community in Mexico (Maynard et al, in revision), but has not been explored in China. In order to explore these hypotheses and question, we designed a mixed-method study, described

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Participants
Procedure
Coding categories and examples
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Limitations and Future
ETHICS STATEMENT
CONCLUSION
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