Despite extensive research on career decision-making self-efficacy (CDMSE) in relation to youth's career development and outcomes, the relative influence of different parental variables on youth's CDMSE remains relatively unclear. Thus, this meta-analysis sought to compare correlational findings concerning the influence of three types of parental variables-parental cognitions, parenting behaviors, and parentchild relationships-on youth's CDMSE. This meta-analysis also aimed to examine differences in how maternal influences only, paternal influences only, and the influence of both parents are associated with youth's CDMSE. A systematic search for relevant literature was conducted in six scientific databases (i.e., ERIC, PsycINFO, Social Sciences Citation Index, Social Services Abstracts, Sociological Abstracts, and Social Work Abstracts) and other sources (i.e., Google Scholar and reference searching), which yielded 27 quantitative studies from 3529 records on parental factors of youth's CDMSE published between 1983 and 2020. The results showed that all three types of parental variables demonstrated a low to medium association with youth's CDMSE, although parental cognitions had the largest effect size (r = .312; 95% CI [0.217, 0.407]), followed by parenting behaviors (r = .303; 95% CI [0.248, 0.359]) and parent-child relationships (r = .255; 95% CI [0.226, 0.284]). The effect size for the influences of both parents (r = .312; 95% CI [0.264, 0.359]) was found to be larger than that of maternal (r = .256; 95% CI [0.216, 0.296]) or paternal influences (r = .230; 95% CI [0.186, 0.275]) alone. Those results pose important implications and indicate promising directions for research and practice to improve parenting about young people's career development.
KeywordsParental cognitions, parenting behaviors, parent-child relationships, meta-analysis, career decision-making self-efficacy Highlights • Youth's career decision-making self-efficacy was the outcome variable in this study.• Different parental influences impact youth's career decision-making self-efficacy.• Parental cognition was most strongly correlated with the outcome variable.• Parenting behaviors and parent-child relationships also affect the outcome variable.• Both parents together impact the outcome variable more than a single parent alone.