"She is a Mother, but still Childish". Exploring Adult Caregivers' Perspectives on Adolescent Parenting.
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| Title: | "She is a Mother, but still Childish". Exploring Adult Caregivers' Perspectives on Adolescent Parenting. |
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| Authors: | Berry, Lizette M.1,2,3 (AUTHOR) l.m.berry@uva.nl, Crone, Mathilde R.4,5 (AUTHOR), Mathews, Shanaaz2 (AUTHOR), Reis, Ria1,2,3,4 (AUTHOR) |
| Source: | Child & Adolescent Social Work Journal. Feb2026, Vol. 43 Issue 1, p13-28. 16p. |
| Subject Terms: | *Qualitative research, *Autonomy (Psychology), *Parent-child relationships, *Content analysis, *Parenting, *Family relations, *Research methodology, *Child rearing, *Interpersonal relations, *Caregiver attitudes, *Adults, Research funding, Mental health, Self-efficacy, Interviewing, Evaluation of human services programs, Psychological well-being, Descriptive statistics, Teenagers' conduct of life, Co-parents, Intergenerational relations |
| Geographic Terms: | South Africa |
| Abstract: | The adolescent-adult caregiver relationship is arguably one of the strongest influences on adolescent parents' development and parenting abilities. In Cape Town, South Africa, an evaluation of a parenting programme targeting school-going adolescent parents, considered the intervention effects on parenting and adolescent wellbeing, in three low-income communities. Adolescent parents resided with their adult caregivers. This paper draws on seventeen qualitative interviews with the caregivers of these adolescent parents. The qualitative interviews formed part of a wider parenting programme evaluation. This study explored the nature of the adolescent-caregiver relationship, and the potential effects of these relationships on adolescents' wellbeing and parenting competencies. The findings suggest that while caregivers played co-parenting roles, they were often not emotionally supportive, placed multiple demands on the adolescents, and portrayed authoritarian approaches. The adolescent-caregiver relationships were often complex, hierarchical, and reflected negative parenting. Caregiver behaviours possibly left adolescents feeling unsupported, restricted in their parental autonomy, and undermined. Caregivers reported adolescents' use of harsh discipline measures with their children. The findings highlight the indelible imprint that older generations, particularly those upholding traditional values, have on adolescent parents and their parenting. The authors conclude that caregiving environments that lack supportive interactions may lead to an elevated risk of compromised mental health and lowered parental competency for adolescent parents. Caregiver-adolescent relationship quality should be considered in interventions targeting adolescent parents. Interventions should be inclusive of adolescents' caregivers, emphasising that support relationships should nurture both the adolescent and their young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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| Database: | Education Research Complete |
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| Abstract: | The adolescent-adult caregiver relationship is arguably one of the strongest influences on adolescent parents' development and parenting abilities. In Cape Town, South Africa, an evaluation of a parenting programme targeting school-going adolescent parents, considered the intervention effects on parenting and adolescent wellbeing, in three low-income communities. Adolescent parents resided with their adult caregivers. This paper draws on seventeen qualitative interviews with the caregivers of these adolescent parents. The qualitative interviews formed part of a wider parenting programme evaluation. This study explored the nature of the adolescent-caregiver relationship, and the potential effects of these relationships on adolescents' wellbeing and parenting competencies. The findings suggest that while caregivers played co-parenting roles, they were often not emotionally supportive, placed multiple demands on the adolescents, and portrayed authoritarian approaches. The adolescent-caregiver relationships were often complex, hierarchical, and reflected negative parenting. Caregiver behaviours possibly left adolescents feeling unsupported, restricted in their parental autonomy, and undermined. Caregivers reported adolescents' use of harsh discipline measures with their children. The findings highlight the indelible imprint that older generations, particularly those upholding traditional values, have on adolescent parents and their parenting. The authors conclude that caregiving environments that lack supportive interactions may lead to an elevated risk of compromised mental health and lowered parental competency for adolescent parents. Caregiver-adolescent relationship quality should be considered in interventions targeting adolescent parents. Interventions should be inclusive of adolescents' caregivers, emphasising that support relationships should nurture both the adolescent and their young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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| ISSN: | 07380151 |
| DOI: | 10.1007/s10560-025-01020-2 |