Parent math anxiety and children’s math success: The role of autonomy-supportive and controlling parenting behaviors

  • Abstract
  • Literature Map
  • Similar Papers
Abstract
Translate article icon Translate Article Star icon
Take notes icon Take Notes

Parent math anxiety and children’s math success: The role of autonomy-supportive and controlling parenting behaviors

Similar Papers
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 149
  • 10.1016/j.lindif.2012.12.014
The influence of experiencing success in math on math anxiety, perceived math competence, and math performance
  • Jan 9, 2013
  • Learning and Individual Differences
  • Brenda R.J Jansen + 5 more

The influence of experiencing success in math on math anxiety, perceived math competence, and math performance

  • Research Article
  • 10.46827/ejes.v0i0.1814
STUDENTS’ MATHEMATICS ATTITUDES AND METACOGNITIVE PROCESSES IN MATHEMATICAL PROBLEM SOLVING
  • Jul 20, 2018
  • European Journal of Education Studies
  • Conrado Ares Duque + 1 more

Mathematical problem solving is considered as one of the many endpoints in teaching Mathematics to students. This study looked into the performance in mathematics problem solving among fourth year students of Central Mindanao University Laboratory High School and their relationship with students’ attitudes towards Mathematics. The attitudes measured were Attitude towards success in Math, Mother’s mathematics attitude, Father’s mathematics attitude, Motivation, Usefulness of Math, Teacher’s mathematics attitude, Confidence in learning math, and mathematics anxiety. It also investigated the metacognitive processes of students considering varying levels of their mathematics anxiety. It used the responses of 127 students. Of the 127, (nine) 9 were selected according to their mathematics anxiety levels to determine and compare their metacognitive processes. Results showed that students consider Mathematics as useful and they have a positive attitude towards success in Mathematics. The students’ fathers, mothers, and teachers also have positive attitudes towards their mathematics learning. However, overall, the students’ performance in mathematics problem solving is considered poor. Among the eight (8) mathematics attitudes only confidence in learning Math and mathematics anxiety were correlated with performance in mathematics problem solving. Confidence in learning Math was positively correlated, while mathematics anxiety was negatively correlated with performance in mathematics problem solving. Students with high mathematics anxiety tend to confirm their solutions with their classmates. Students with moderate anxiety are test-anxious and those with low anxiety are distracted by external factors, but can readily shift their focus back to problem solving. The three (3) cases showed that students with low, moderate, and high mathematics anxiety employed mostly orientation and execution procedures. There were only few instances of verification and lesser instances of organization procedures. Self-questioning was the most observed metacognitive skill. Furthermore, students from the three (3) cases were unable to correctly answer two (2) problems, both of which are non-routine due to unfamiliarity and “experiential interference”. Article visualizations:

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 46
  • 10.1037/xge0000490
Disassociating the relation between parents' math anxiety and children's math achievement: Long-term effects of a math app intervention.
  • Dec 1, 2018
  • Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
  • Marjorie W Schaeffer + 4 more

Although parents' fears and worries about math-termed math anxiety-are negatively associated with their children's math achievement in early elementary school, access to an educational math app that 1st-grade children and parents use together can ameliorate this relation. Here we show that children of higher-math-anxious parents learn less math during 1st-3rd grades, but this is not the case when families are given a math app (even after app use markedly decreases). Reducing the link between parents' math anxiety and their positive attitudes about math for their children helped to explain the sustained benefit of the math app. These findings indicate that interventions involving parents and children together can have powerful lasting effects on children's academic achievement and suggest that changes in parents' expectations for their children's potential for success in math, and the value they place on this success, play a role in these sustained effects. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 45
  • 10.1111/mbe.12027
Teachers' Spatial Anxiety Relates to 1st‐ and 2nd‐Graders' Spatial Learning
  • Aug 16, 2013
  • Mind, Brain, and Education
  • Elizabeth A Gunderson + 3 more

ABSTRACTTeachers' anxiety about an academic domain, such as math, can impact students' learning in that domain. We asked whether this relation held in the domain of spatial skill, given the importance of spatial skill for success in math and science and its malleability at a young age. We measured 1st‐ and 2nd‐grade teachers' spatial anxiety (N = 19) and students' spatial skill (N = 132). Teachers' spatial anxiety significantly predicted students' end‐of‐year spatial skill, even after accounting for students' beginning‐of‐year spatial skill, phonological working memory, grade level, and teachers' math anxiety. Since spatial skill is not a stand‐alone part of the curriculum like math or reading, teachers with high levels of spatial anxiety may simply avoid incorporating spatial activities in the classroom. Results suggest that addressing teachers' spatial anxieties may improve spatial learning in early elementary school.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 9
  • 10.7717/peerj.14510
The impacts of math anxiety, science anxiety, and gender on arts versus sciences choices in Qatari secondary schools.
  • Jan 9, 2023
  • PeerJ
  • Ahmed M Megreya + 1 more

Previous studies showed small-to-moderate associations between students' performances in math and science and math anxiety and science anxiety, respectively. Accordingly, the high prevalence of these two forms of topic anxiety represent severe obstructions to the worldwide demand calling for improving the quality of math and science achievements and, subsequently, increasing career success in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) domains. Therefore, this study examined math anxiety and science anxiety among female and male students who were enrolled in Sciences vs Arts tracks in Grades 11 and 12 in a Middle Eastern Arabic-speaking country (Qatar), and investigated how gender, math anxiety and science anxiety could predict this enrollment. Results showed that students in the Arts track experienced higher levels of math anxiety and science anxiety than those in the Sciences track, regardless of the students' gender. However, a binary logistic regression analysis showed that science learning anxiety, but not evaluation science anxiety nor math learning or evaluation anxieties, significantly predicts students' enrollment in Arts and Sciences tracks. Therefore, STEM career success is associated with good knowledge of STEM domains and positive emotions towards math and science.

  • Preprint Article
  • 10.2139/ssrn.5064582
Parent Math Anxiety and Children's Math Success: The Role of Autonomy-Supportive and Controlling Parenting Behaviors
  • Jan 1, 2024
  • Kimia Akhavein + 1 more

Parent Math Anxiety and Children's Math Success: The Role of Autonomy-Supportive and Controlling Parenting Behaviors

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 33
  • 10.1111/j.1471-6402.1986.tb00759.x
Mathematics and Self-Esteem: Implications for Women's Career Choice
  • Dec 1, 1986
  • Psychology of Women Quarterly
  • Joan M Singer + 1 more

The relationship of math participation and success to self-esteem and career goals is examined in a sample of 64 women and 52 men college students at the end of their sophomore year. No gender differences were found in math anxiety or perceptions of the usefulness of mathematics, but women were less likely to select a math-related career goal. Among the men students, math participation and self-assessments of math ability were positively related to more general self-estimates of competence; among women, these variables were not related significantly. Women's choices for math-related careers were more closely associated with scholastic ability and math background than were men's career choices. These results are discussed in the context of societal pressures and supports for men and women in regard to math participation.

  • PDF Download Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 87
  • 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01597
Parent-child math anxiety and math-gender stereotypes predict adolescents' math education outcomes
  • Nov 3, 2015
  • Frontiers in Psychology
  • Bettina J Casad + 2 more

Two studies examined social determinants of adolescents' math anxiety including parents' own math anxiety and children's endorsement of math-gender stereotypes. In Study 1, parent-child dyads were surveyed and the interaction between parent and child math anxiety was examined, with an eye to same- and other-gender dyads. Results indicate that parent's math anxiety interacts with daughters' and sons' anxiety to predict math self-efficacy, GPA, behavioral intentions, math attitudes, and math devaluing. Parents with lower math anxiety showed a positive relationship to children's math outcomes when children also had lower anxiety. The strongest relationships were found with same-gender dyads, particularly Mother-Daughter dyads. Study 2 showed that endorsement of math-gender stereotypes predicts math anxiety (and not vice versa) for performance beliefs and outcomes (self-efficacy and GPA). Further, math anxiety fully mediated the relationship between gender stereotypes and math self-efficacy for girls and boys, and for boys with GPA. These findings address gaps in the literature on the role of parents' math anxiety in the effects of children's math anxiety and math anxiety as a mechanism affecting performance. Results have implications for interventions on parents' math anxiety and dispelling gender stereotypes in math classrooms.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 36
  • 10.1016/j.jecp.2020.104992
When beliefs matter most: Examining children’s math achievement in the context of parental math anxiety
  • Sep 29, 2020
  • Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
  • Alex M Silver + 2 more

When beliefs matter most: Examining children’s math achievement in the context of parental math anxiety

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 3
  • 10.1111/nyas.14773
Mathematics anxiety in deaf, hard of hearing, and hearing college students
  • Apr 1, 2022
  • Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
  • Akriti Mishra + 4 more

While mathematics anxiety (MA) has been widely researched in recent decades, this study addresses significant gaps: namely, research that explores the relationship between MA and self‐reported mathematics experiences; samples adults with a range of MA levels; and controls for general anxiety. Additionally, the study sampled deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) students, whose diverse life and educational experiences often differ from hearing students’. We investigated whether DHH students’ experiences with mathematics (i.e., parental behaviors, school environment, and mathematics feelings) and demographic variables (i.e., hearing status, age, and gender) predict their MA, and whether these relationships differ from those in hearing students. Self‐report questionnaires were completed by 296 DHH and hearing college students. Linear regression analyses controlling for general anxiety led to the following inference: DHH students who reported more positive attitudes toward mathematics and school environments demonstrated higher MA. Also, the relationships between mathematics feelings, parental behaviors, and MA differed between DHH and hearing students. Logistic regression analyses showed no contribution of MA to students’ likelihood of pursuing STEM degrees in either DHH or between DHH and hearing groups. Overall, this work breaks new ground in the study of MA in DHH students and challenges standard views of the relationships between MA and individual experiences.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 143
  • 10.1177/2372732215601438
Math Anxiety
  • Oct 1, 2015
  • Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences
  • Sian L Beilock + 1 more

The United States is currently not producing enough graduates in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields to meet the demands of a technology-dependent society. Although there are many efforts in place to improve STEM education in the United States, most notably, President Obama’s Educate to Innovate campaign, these efforts focus mostly on innovating the teaching of math content and less on the role of affective factors in math achievement. Here we discuss a phenomenon known as math anxiety (i.e., negative feelings of tension and fear that many people experience when engaging in math) and the implications math anxiety carries for math success and STEM engagement. We begin by highlighting the most recent findings from research in psychology, education, and neuroscience on math anxiety. We then discuss the consequences of math anxiety as well as likely causes and promising remediations. We suggest that the initiatives currently underway to improve STEM involvement and achievement would benefit from educating current and future teachers, parents, and even students about math anxiety, its causes, consequences, and possibilities for amelioration.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 21
  • 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.645793
True Grit in Learning Math: The Math Anxiety-Achievement Link Is Mediated by Math-Specific Grit
  • Apr 6, 2021
  • Frontiers in Psychology
  • Youqing Yu + 7 more

In this study, we tested a possible mechanism of the association between math anxiety and math achievement: the mediating role of math-specific grit (i.e., sustaining effort in the face of adversity when learning math). In Study 1, a sample of 10th grade students (N = 222) completed a battery of personality and attitude questionnaires, and math achievement was indexed by curriculum-based examination scores. Mediation analyses indicated that math-specific grit, but not domain-general grit, mediated the relationship between math anxiety and math achievement. In Study 2, we replicated and extended the above findings with another sample of 11th grade students (N = 465). Mediation analyses indicated that math-specific grit and math-specific procrastination played sequential mediating roles in the relationship between math anxiety and math achievement. That is, individuals with higher math anxiety were less gritty in math learning, possibly further leading them to be more procrastinated in performing math work, which may finally result in worse math achievement. In summary, the current study provides the first evidence that math-specific grit may mediate the relationship between math anxiety and math achievement. Furthermore, it also demonstrated the value of math-specific grit over domain-general grit in predicting math success, which invites a broader investigation on subject-specific grit.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.54097/ehss.v8i.4582
Intergenerational Transmission of Math anxiety: Discussion About Research of Parents’ and Children’s Math Anxiety
  • Feb 7, 2023
  • Journal of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences
  • Kaiming Zhang

Math is an abstract and challenging subject, so students may have math anxiety when studying math. Math anxiety might be transmitted intergenerationally. This article discusses research on math anxiety’s intergenerational transmission in three aspects. The first aspect is the factors of parents influencing children’s math anxiety levels. These factors are parents’ math anxiety, intelligence mindset, parent-child relationships, and parental educational involvement. The second aspect is the influence of parental math anxiety on children. Parental anxiety can influence children’s math anxiety, math outcomes, and how much math they learn, and it can affect children as early as kindergarten age. The third aspect is the methods and interventions reducing children’s math anxiety and improving outcomes. Stopping parents with high math anxiety levels, using math applications involving interaction between parents and children, changing fixed mindset to growth mindset, and doing mindfulness are all interventions that can help reduce children’s math anxiety. In conclusion, the intergenerational transmission of math anxiety is critical and represented by factors of parents influencing children’s math anxiety level and the influence of parental math anxiety on children. Parents should use appropriate ways to reduce their children’s math anxiety. Further research should focus on the cause-and-effect relationship between parents’ math anxiety and children.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1016/j.jecp.2025.106440
Parental mathematics anxiety predicts children's cardinal number word and numeral knowledge at preschool entry.
  • Apr 1, 2026
  • Journal of experimental child psychology
  • David C Geary + 3 more

Parental mathematics anxiety predicts children's cardinal number word and numeral knowledge at preschool entry.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 13
  • 10.1111/nyas.14736
Conceptualizing the factor structure of parents' math anxiety and associations with children's mathematics skills.
  • Jan 14, 2022
  • Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
  • Jimena Cosso + 5 more

There is a growing literature examining the association between parents' math anxiety and children's mathematics skills. Previous research has considered parents' math anxiety as a unidimensional construct that primarily focused on parents' experiences doing mathematics themselves. However, this research did not account for parents' experiences when doing mathematics with their children. Thus, there were two goals of the present study: (1) to identify the structure of parents' math anxiety when considering context-dependentsituations, and (2) to determine whether parental math anxiety was related to children's early numeracy skills. We conducted a series of confirmatory factor analyses using a sample of 155 preschool children (Mage =4.20 years, SD=0.71; 51% female). The best fitting model of parents' math anxiety was a bifactor model, suggesting that parents' math anxiety was best conceptualized as a multidimensional construct. However, structural equation models showed parent math anxiety was not a significant predictor of children's numeracy performance. These findings provide a foundation for understanding parents' math anxiety as multidimensional and raise questions about potential mechanisms that may explain prior work finding mixed relations between math anxiety and children's numeracy performance.

Save Icon
Up Arrow
Open/Close
  • Ask R Discovery Star icon
  • Chat PDF Star icon

AI summaries and top papers from 250M+ research sources.