to be less confident, less competent, and even less
successful in learning. This happens because
emotionally they have not gained the trust of the
parents (Dacey and Kenny, 1997). The results, author
discusses the theoretical and practical implications of
these results in this study. Although recent studies
have provided some explanation about the
relationship between difficulties in emotion
regulation and aggression in adolescence, the role of
intervening variables in this connection has been
ignored. The purpose of this research was to
understand the relationship between adolescents’
emotion regulation and aggression and to focus on the
mediator function of social problem-solving and
anger control. Participants comprised 413 adolescents
(252 females and 161 males; mean age 15 years). The
findings provided evidence for the partial mediator
role of anger control and social problem-solving
(Kuzucu, 2016).
Parents use a method or parenting way so that
their children can grow and develop into socially
mature individuals, called parenting. Adolescents
may especially need social and emotional help.
They’re learning how to handle new demands in
school and social life while dealing with new, intense
emotions (both positive and negative), and they’re
increasingly feeling that they should do so without
adult guidance. Social and emotional learning (SEL)
programs are one way to help them navigate these
difficulties. SEL programs try to help adolescents
cope with their difficulties more successfully by
improving skills and mindsets, and they try to create
respectful school environments that young people
want to be a part of by changing the school’s climate
in this article, David Yeager defines those terms and
explains the changes that adolescents experience with
the onset of puberty. Then he reviews a variety of
SEL programs to see what works best with this age
group. On the positive side, Yeager finds that
effective universal SEL can transform adolescents’
lives for the better. Less encouragingly, typical SEL
programs—which directly teach skills and invite
participants to rehearse those skills over the course of
many classroom lessons—have a poor track record
with middle adolescents (roughly age 14 to 17), even
though they work well with children. But some
programs stand out for their effectiveness with
adolescents. Rather than teaching them skills, Yeager
finds, effective programs for adolescents focus on
mindsets and climate. Harnessing adolescents’
developmental motivations, such programs aim to
make them feel respected by adults and peers and
offer them the chance to gain status and admiration in
the eyes of people whose opinions they value (David,
S.Y. 2017).
The type of parenting mapping consists of (1)
based on regulation (2) affection. Several research
studies suggest a link between parents’ emotion
socialization and children’s social competence and
behavior problems. Parents contribute to their
children’s emotion socialization, more directly,
through responses to their children’s emotions. Early
emotion socialization experiences with parents
establish patterns of emotion experience, expression,
and regulation that children carry into their broader
social circles. The aim of this study was to document
mothers’ responses to their children’s sadness, anger,
fear, and being overjoyed. A study sample of 868
mothers of pre-schoolers completed the questionnaire
in Turkey. The validity and reliability properties of
the Responses to Children’s Emotions (RCE)
Questionnaire were also examined. We found that
mothers in Turkey preferred to respond differently to
children’s different emotions. Mothers’ responses
generally did not differ according to the gender of
their children; the only difference was found for
sadness. Mothers’ responses to their children’s
emotions related to the children’s and mothers’ ages,
monthly family income, levels of mothers’ education,
mothers’ employment status, birth order of children,
and the city they lived in. This study is important in
that it is the first to document mothers’ emotion
socialization strategies for their children in terms of
one positive and three negative emotions. (Ersay,
2014).
Hurlock (1993) explained that parenting is
divided into three namely authoritarian, democratic,
and permissive. The characteristics of child
authoritarian parenting must be submissive and
obedient to the wishes of parents, Controlling parents
on the behavior of children is very tight and less
provide strengthening, often give punishment if
failure, Control behavior through external control.
While the democratic parenting pattern has
characteristics Children are given the opportunity to
independently and develop internal controls, the child
is recognized as a person by the parents and involved
in decision making. Permissive parenting pattern has
characteristics Parental control is less, loose or free,
Child less guided in self-regulating, Children are
allowed to make their own decisions and can do as
they wish themselves. (David Yeager, 2017)
In article links student and family characteristics,
along with perceived purposes for doing homework,
to homework emotion management as reported by
205 high school students in grades 9-10. A results
revealed that adolescents’ management of their
Difference of Teen Emotion Based on Parenting Patterns
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