Abstract
AbstractThe influence of perceived social norms on behaviour has been studied in a variety of domains. However, little research has examined their application to child discipline. This study explored social norms perceptions and their associations with parental discipline in greater Cape Town, South Africa. A cross‐sectional study of 195 mothers (using convenience sampling) from two Early Childhood Development centres examined self‐reported violent and non‐violent parenting behaviour, and perceived descriptive (usual behaviour in a group) and injunctive (appraisal of such behaviour) group norms. Parents overestimated the prevalence of violent parenting. Perceived descriptive norms of violent parenting were associated with self‐reported violent parenting behaviour; and perceived descriptive norms of non‐violent parenting were associated with self‐reported non‐violent parenting behaviour. Estimation of support for violent and for non‐violent parenting differed by centre, as did the relationship between perceived injunctive norms of non‐violent parenting and self‐reported non‐violent parenting behaviour. We also found significant effects of social identification, parent educational attainment and parent‐reported child misbehaviour. Parents' perceptions of group norms of parental discipline may be mistaken yet influence their own behaviour, providing the potential basis for violence prevention interventions.
Highlights
The influence of perceived social norms on behaviour has been studied in a variety of domains
Perceived descriptive norms of violent parenting were associated with self-reported violent parenting behaviour; and perceived descriptive norms of non-violent parenting were associated with self-reported non-violent parenting behaviour
In Khayelitsha, the results provide strong evidence for self-reported non-violent parenting being positively associated with: the perceived descriptive norm; the perceived injunctive norm (1.132, 95%confidence interval (CI) [1.016, 1.262], p = .027); level of social identification (1.066, 95%CI [1.017, 1.117], p = .010); and parent educational attainment (1.104, 95%CI [1.022, 1.192], p = .014)
Summary
The influence of perceived social norms on behaviour has been studied in a variety of domains. This study explored social norms perceptions and their associations with parental discipline in greater Cape Town, South Africa. A cross-sectional study of 195 mothers (using convenience sampling) from two Early Childhood Development (ECD) centres examined self-reported violent and non-violent parenting behaviour, and perceived descriptive (usual behaviour in a group) and injunctive (appraisal of such behaviour) group norms. Estimation of support for violent and for non-violent parenting differed by centre, as did the relationship between perceived injunctive norms of non-violent parenting and self-reported non-violent parenting behaviour. We found significant effects of social identification, parent educational attainment and parent-reported child misbehaviour. Parents' perceptions of group norms of parental discipline may be mistaken yet influence their own behaviour, providing the potential basis for violence prevention interventions
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