Parenting Style, Perfectionism, and Creativity in High-Ability and High-Achieving Young Adults
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2012
Keywords
creativity, high ability, high achieving, parenting style, perfectionism
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1177/0162353212459257
Abstract
The current study explores the potential relationships among perceived parenting style, perfectionism, and creativity in a high-ability and high-achieving young adult population. Using data from 323 honors college students at a Midwestern university, bivariate correlations suggested positive relationships between (a) permissive parenting style and creativity and (b) authoritarian parenting style and socially prescribed perfectionism. Furthermore, negative relationships were also found between authoritarian parenting style and creativity. These relationships were further investigated using a path model that included control variables for gender and parent education level. Findings suggest statistically significant relationships between creativity and gender, authoritarian parenting and socially prescribed perfectionism, authoritarian parenting and creativity, and permissive parenting and creativity.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
false
Citation / Publisher Attribution
Journal for the Education of the Gifted, v. 35, no. 4, p. 344-365.
Scholar Commons Citation
Miller, Angie L.; Lambert, Amber D.; and Speirs Neumeister, Kristie L., "Parenting Style, Perfectionism, and Creativity in High-Ability and High-Achieving Young Adults" (2012). Leadership, Counseling, Adult, Career and Higher Education Faculty Publications. 269.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/ehe_facpub/269