Article, 2024

Father knows best? Chinese parents’ perceptions of their influence on child development

Journal of Family Studies, ISSN 1322-9400, 1839-3543, Volume ahead-of-print, ahead-of-print, Pages 1-21, 10.1080/13229400.2024.2356600

Contributors

Li, Xuan 0000-0001-9638-128X [1] [2] Zhang, Cong 0000-0002-2443-1011 (Corresponding author) [3] Yang, Rui 0000-0001-5045-5132 [4] Fong, Vanessa L [5] Way, Niobe [6] Yoshikawa, Hirokazu [7] Chen, Xinyin 0000-0002-8503-5469 [7] Zhang, Guangzhen [8] Liang, Zongbao [8]

Affiliations

  1. [1] New York University Shanghai
  2. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  3. [2] University of Copenhagen
  4. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  5. [3] Fudan University
  6. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  7. [4] New York University Abu Dhabi
  8. [NORA names: United Arab Emirates; Asia, Middle East];
  9. [5] Amherst College
  10. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];

Abstract

This study investigates how Chinese parents’ narratives about the father’s and the mother’s influence on child development reveal their gender beliefs and socialization goals. Drawing on interviews of 62 father-mother pairs from a mixed-method longitudinal study in Nanjing, China, we found that contrary to the assumption that parents of both genders benefit children’s development in their respective, gender-typical ways in extant literature, our participants believed that mothers as executor of ‘trivial’ childrearing tasks provide few positive influences than fathers who steer the ‘broad’ directions of child development and cultivation of male traits. Parents emphasized the importance of instilling masculinity in both boys and girls, which differs from the valuation of mothers’ same-gender role modeling for daughters in Western-based studies. Yet underneath the father’s ‘masculine’ influences are concerns about children’s ability to meet increasingly rigid and narrow standards for masculinity in today’s China, which imposes pressure on mothers, fathers, and sons.

Keywords

China, Nanjing, Social, Western-based studies, ability, beliefs, boys, child development, childrearing, childrearing tasks, children, children's ability, concerns, cultivation, daughter, development, direction, directions of children's development, executor, father-mother pairs, fathers, gender, gender beliefs, girls, goal, influence, interviews, literature, longitudinal study, male traits, masculine influence, masculinity, mixed-methods longitudinal study, mother's influence, mothers, narratives, pairs, parents, parents' perceptions, parents’ narratives, participants, perception, positive influence, pressure, role, social goals, sons, standards, study, task, today, today's China, traits, valuation, way

Funders

  • Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China

Data Provider: Digital Science