Relationship Between Helicopter Parenting and Psychological Wellbeing in College Students

Authors

  • Fathimath Lauza Ahmed Student (Villa College)
  • David Mingay Villa College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55712/ijsri.v7i1.73

Keywords:

Helicopter Parenting, Psychological wellbeing, over parenting, young emerging adults

Abstract

Several international studies suggest that helicopter parenting, a type of parenting with psychological control and excessive parental involvement, has a negative impact on emerging adults’ psychological wellbeing. Hence, this study aimed to determine whether Maldivian college students perceive over involvement by their parents and if this impacts the students’ psychological wellbeing negatively. Seventy-One college students, aged 18 to 25, completed two survey questionnaires: The Helicopter Parenting Scale (LeMoyne & Buchanan, 2011) and the Psychological Wellbeing Scale (Ryff, 2014), the findings of which showed a medium negative correlation between helicopter parenting and overall psychological wellbeing, and stronger negative correlations with environmental mastery and autonomy. Hence, future research needs to explore the impact of over parenting, such as difficulty attaining autonomy and self-efficacy in Maldivian young adults.

Author Biographies

  • Fathimath Lauza Ahmed, Student (Villa College)

    Fathimath Lauza Ahmed completed the bachelor of psychology program at Villa College in December 2023. She works as a leader in Villa college’s Peer Assisted learning program. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Fathimath Lauza Ahmed, mail: fathlauz@gmail.com

     

  • David Mingay, Villa College

    David Mingay is a Guest Lecturer at Villa College. He has worked in the psychology and education departments of various institutions in the UK, Ireland and Seychelles.

     

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Published

30.05.2023

How to Cite

Relationship Between Helicopter Parenting and Psychological Wellbeing in College Students. (2023). International Journal of Social Research & Innovation, 7(1), 49-70. https://doi.org/10.55712/ijsri.v7i1.73