TY - BOOK AU - Simpkins,Sandra Denise AU - Fredricks,Jennifer A. AU - Eccles,Jacquelynne S. AU - Huston,Aletha C. AU - AU - AU - AU - TI - The role of parents in the ontogeny of achievement-related motivation and behavioral choices T2 - Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, SN - 9781119135210 AV - HQ755.H972.R654 2015 PY - 2015/// CY - Boston, Massachusetts PB - Wiley KW - Parent and child KW - Parental influences KW - Achievement motivation in youth KW - Expectation (Psychology) KW - Motivation (Psychology) in adolescence KW - Youth KW - Conduct of life N1 - 1 (pages 138-151) and index; Abstract --; Introduction --; Methods --; Missing data, descriptive statistics, and overview of the analyses --; Child factors and parent belief models --; Parent belief and behavior models --; Parent behavior and child belief models --; Youth belief and participation models --; Discussion --; Commentary on The role of parents in the ontogeny of achievement-related motivation and behavioral choices; Aletha C. Huston; 2 N2 - This monograph offers a comprehensive test of an important theory of motivation in regard to parents and their children. Parents believe what they do matters. But, how does it matter? How do parents' beliefs about their children early on translate into the choices those children make as adolescents? The study suggests that parents' influence appears primarily for peripheral subjects (sports and music), but not for reading and math raises many issues for further research. The findings demonstrated that: (a) these relations were stronger in the leisure domains than in the academic domains, (b) these relations did not consistently vary based on youth gender, (c) parents were stronger predictors of their children's beliefs than vice versa, and (d) adolescents' beliefs were stronger predictors of their behaviors than the reverse. The findings presented in this monograph extend our understanding of the complexity of families, developmental processes that unfold over time, and the extent to which these processes are universal across domains and child gender ER -