Attachment to parents and friends as a context for development of self-concept in adolescence: The personality traits as mediators Cover Image

Attachment to parents and friends as a context for development of self-concept in adolescence: The personality traits as mediators
Attachment to parents and friends as a context for development of self-concept in adolescence: The personality traits as mediators

Author(s): Ksenija Krstić
Subject(s): Social psychology and group interaction, Developmental Psychology, Personality Psychology
Published by: Društvo psihologa Srbije
Keywords: attachment; parents and friends; self-concept; big five personality traits; adolescence;

Summary/Abstract: The aim of the research is to study developmental relations between attachment to mother, father and friends and dimensions of adolescents’ self-concept. More specifically, we examine if this relation is direct or mediated by some personality construct. A sample of 878 students (13 and 16 years old) from Belgrade urban lower secondary and upper secondary schools participated in this research. Participants completed ECR for mother, father and friend; Self-perception profile for adolescents and NEOFFI. The results have indicated that dimensions of attachment are correlated with dimensions of self-concept, and that they can explain 13% of variance in dimensions of self-concept. When the personality traits are introduced as mediators, attachment dimensions explain only 4.5% of variance in self-concept. The quality of attachment relations with parents is not related to adolescents’ self-concept, while attachment to friends is correlated with social dimensions of self-concept. Hence, this study suggests that adolescents with particular parental attachment styles differ according to their self-concept profiles, but that peer attachment is important for adolescents’ social self. Beside that, this study reveals significant gender differences: relation between parental and peer attachment and adolescents’ self-concepts is not the same for boys and girls.

  • Issue Year: 49/2016
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 335-355
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: English