“…For example, parents' general beliefs and related child-rearing practices may provide a basis for their children's own selfperceptions (Frome & Eccles, 1998;Parsons et a1., 1982;Stevenson & Newman, 1986) and, consequently, their task-focused or task-avoidant behavior, which is then reflected in their mathematical performance. Another possibility is that parents' general beliefs about their children's academic competendes are assodated with authoritative parenting styles (Murphey, 1992), the effective scaffolding (Pratt, Green, MacVicar, & Bountrogianni, 1992), and rational guidance (Maccoby & Martin, 1983), which have been shown to motivate children's active problem solving attempts and task-focused behavior (Ginsburg & Bronstein, 1993;Onatsu-Arvilommi, Nurmi, & Aunola, 1998), and high subsequent performance.…”