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Author NotesThis research was supported by four grants from the German Research Foundation (DFG) (to R. Pekrun; Project for the Analysis of Learning and Achievement in Mathematics, PALMA; PE 320/11-1, PE 320/11-2, PE 320/11-3, PE 320/11-4). This research was also partly supported by the Marie Curie Career Integration Grant (CIG630680; to Kou Murayama) and JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Number 15H05401; to Kou Murayama). We thank the German Data Processing and Research Center (DPC) of the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) for conducting the sampling and the assessments of the main study. We also thank Dr. Satoshi Usami (University of Tsukuba; University of Reading) and Child Development Group (CDG) at the University of Reading for helpful and insightful comments. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Kou Murayama, School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Earley Gate, Whiteknights, Reading, UK, RG6 6AL. E-mail: k.murayama@reading.ac.uk.
Running head: PARENTAL ASPIRATION 2
AbstractPrevious research has suggested that parents' aspirations for their children's academic attainment can have a positive influence on children's actual academic performance. Possible negative effects of parental over-aspiration, however, have found little attention in the psychological literature. Employing a dual-change score model with longitudinal data from a representative sample of German schoolchildren and their parents (N = 3,530; grades 5 to 10), we showed that parental aspiration and children's mathematical achievement were linked by positive reciprocal relations over time. Importantly, we also found that parental aspiration that exceeded their expectation (i.e., over-aspiration) had negative reciprocal relations with children's mathematical achievement. These results were fairly robust after controlling for a variety of demographic and cognitive variables such as children's gender, age, intelligence, school type, and family SES. The results were also replicated with an independent sample of US parents and their children. These findings suggest that unrealistically high parental aspiration can be detrimental for children's achievement.