“…Our results also confirmed the conclusion of other studies that not all kinds of parental involvement are beneficial for children's outcomes (Cooper et al, 2000;Moroni et al, 2015;Silinskas et al, 2015). For instance, it has recently been emphasized that it is not how often parents help, but rather in what ways parents help that matters (Moroni et al, 2015[see Pomerantz et al, 2007, for a review]). That is, homework assistance is beneficial for children's learning if it supports autonomy, supports competence, is well structured, and is emotionally responsive to children's needs; alternatively, if parental homework assistance is controlling, intrusive, or interfering, accompanied by negative parental emotions and the frequent taking over of children's responsibilities, then it may have paradoxically negative links to children's learning outcomes (Cooper et al, 2000;Dumont et al, 2012Dumont et al, , 2014Hill & Tyson, 2009;Grolnick & Pomerantz, 2009;Silinskas et al, 2015).…”