The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students

Substance use is a significant problem among middle school students in the United States. Research indicates that the early use of substances increases the likelihood of negative outcomes including long-term use and abuse. Both parenting and peer variables exert strong influences on children's...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mays, Sally Ann
Format: Others
Published: VCU Scholars Compass 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/936
http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1935&context=etd
id ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-1935
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-19352017-03-17T08:32:37Z The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students Mays, Sally Ann Substance use is a significant problem among middle school students in the United States. Research indicates that the early use of substances increases the likelihood of negative outcomes including long-term use and abuse. Both parenting and peer variables exert strong influences on children's decisions to use or abstain from substances. As children age, peers begin to exert a stronger influence, but parenting practices can significantly reduce peers' harmful influences. In this study, three waves of data (collected at the end of 6th grade, and the beginning and end of 7th grade) from a large multi-site study were used to examine the role of peer deviance as a mediator of the influence of parental monitoring on substance use among an ethnically diverse sample of over 2,500 middle school students. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the longitudinal interrelations among parental monitoring, peer deviance, and substance use among middle school students, and to investigate potential group differences by gender and family structure. The hypotheses that peer deviance and substance use would influence one another over time were upheld. The two variables were interrelated such that peer deviance produced increases in substance use over time, but so too did substance use produce peer deviance over time. The prospective relation between substance use and peer deviance was stronger than the converse relation, suggesting that substance using peers seek one another out. Parental monitoring was associated with decreases in substance use over time, but its influence was small. Parental monitoring was more strongly associated with decreases in peer deviance. However, parental monitoring's effect on substance use was not mediated by peer deviance over these 3 waves in that parental monitoring at Wave 1 did not predict substance use 1 year later. Contrary to hypothesis, substance use was not associated with changes in parental monitoring over time, although peer deviance was associated with less monitoring. In general, parental monitoring was more closely linked to peer deviance than it was to substance use. This study found no convincing evidence to suggest group differences in the overall pattern of findings according to gender or family structure. 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/936 http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1935&context=etd © The Author Theses and Dissertations VCU Scholars Compass middle school students substance use peer deviance parental monitoring Psychology Social and Behavioral Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic middle school students
substance use
peer deviance
parental monitoring
Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle middle school students
substance use
peer deviance
parental monitoring
Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Mays, Sally Ann
The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students
description Substance use is a significant problem among middle school students in the United States. Research indicates that the early use of substances increases the likelihood of negative outcomes including long-term use and abuse. Both parenting and peer variables exert strong influences on children's decisions to use or abstain from substances. As children age, peers begin to exert a stronger influence, but parenting practices can significantly reduce peers' harmful influences. In this study, three waves of data (collected at the end of 6th grade, and the beginning and end of 7th grade) from a large multi-site study were used to examine the role of peer deviance as a mediator of the influence of parental monitoring on substance use among an ethnically diverse sample of over 2,500 middle school students. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the longitudinal interrelations among parental monitoring, peer deviance, and substance use among middle school students, and to investigate potential group differences by gender and family structure. The hypotheses that peer deviance and substance use would influence one another over time were upheld. The two variables were interrelated such that peer deviance produced increases in substance use over time, but so too did substance use produce peer deviance over time. The prospective relation between substance use and peer deviance was stronger than the converse relation, suggesting that substance using peers seek one another out. Parental monitoring was associated with decreases in substance use over time, but its influence was small. Parental monitoring was more strongly associated with decreases in peer deviance. However, parental monitoring's effect on substance use was not mediated by peer deviance over these 3 waves in that parental monitoring at Wave 1 did not predict substance use 1 year later. Contrary to hypothesis, substance use was not associated with changes in parental monitoring over time, although peer deviance was associated with less monitoring. In general, parental monitoring was more closely linked to peer deviance than it was to substance use. This study found no convincing evidence to suggest group differences in the overall pattern of findings according to gender or family structure.
author Mays, Sally Ann
author_facet Mays, Sally Ann
author_sort Mays, Sally Ann
title The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students
title_short The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students
title_full The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students
title_fullStr The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Parental Monitoring and Peer Deviance on Substance Use Among Middle School Students
title_sort influence of parental monitoring and peer deviance on substance use among middle school students
publisher VCU Scholars Compass
publishDate 2007
url http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/936
http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1935&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT mayssallyann theinfluenceofparentalmonitoringandpeerdevianceonsubstanceuseamongmiddleschoolstudents
AT mayssallyann influenceofparentalmonitoringandpeerdevianceonsubstanceuseamongmiddleschoolstudents
_version_ 1718428775016824832