Extensive research has identified parental monitoring to be a protective factor for youth. Parental monitoring includes parents’ solicitation of information from their child and the child’s voluntary disclosure of information. In today’s digital society, parental monitoring can occur using technology, such as text messaging, email, and social networking sites. The current study describes parents’ and youths’ communication technology use explicitly to solicit and share information with each other in a sample of 56 parent–youth dyads from the same family (youth were 13 to 25 years old). We also examined associations between in-person parental monitoring, parental monitoring using technology, parental knowledge, and youth substance use initiat...
Studies using valid measures of monitoring activities have not found the anticipated main effects li...
The purpose of this study was to investigate if parental involvement in digital activities relates t...
Mobile technologies (e.g., smartphones and associated social media accessed through downloadable mob...
The present study examined associations among internet and cellular phone specific parental monitori...
Parental knowledge about adolescents’ activities is an identified protective factor in terms of adol...
The widespread adoption of various digital technologies by today’s teenagers has added a modern wrin...
In this study, parental monitoring construct was disentangled through the introduction of the family...
Today\u27s experts encourage serious conversations between parents and children about the risks of o...
ICS University of Groningen Studies using valid measures of monitoring activities have not found th...
This report looks at some steps parents are taking to observe, discuss, and check up on their childr...
The internet has transformed the way youth communicate, learn, and network, with implications for th...
We are only beginning to understand the ways in which young people are introducing technologies into...
Adolescents are among the highest users of technology and are typically early adopters of new techno...
Adoption rates of parental control applications ( apps ) for teens\u27 mobile devices are low, but l...
The internet has transformed the way youth communicate, learn, and network, with implications for th...
Studies using valid measures of monitoring activities have not found the anticipated main effects li...
The purpose of this study was to investigate if parental involvement in digital activities relates t...
Mobile technologies (e.g., smartphones and associated social media accessed through downloadable mob...
The present study examined associations among internet and cellular phone specific parental monitori...
Parental knowledge about adolescents’ activities is an identified protective factor in terms of adol...
The widespread adoption of various digital technologies by today’s teenagers has added a modern wrin...
In this study, parental monitoring construct was disentangled through the introduction of the family...
Today\u27s experts encourage serious conversations between parents and children about the risks of o...
ICS University of Groningen Studies using valid measures of monitoring activities have not found th...
This report looks at some steps parents are taking to observe, discuss, and check up on their childr...
The internet has transformed the way youth communicate, learn, and network, with implications for th...
We are only beginning to understand the ways in which young people are introducing technologies into...
Adolescents are among the highest users of technology and are typically early adopters of new techno...
Adoption rates of parental control applications ( apps ) for teens\u27 mobile devices are low, but l...
The internet has transformed the way youth communicate, learn, and network, with implications for th...
Studies using valid measures of monitoring activities have not found the anticipated main effects li...
The purpose of this study was to investigate if parental involvement in digital activities relates t...
Mobile technologies (e.g., smartphones and associated social media accessed through downloadable mob...