The Contribution of Parental Factors to Adolescents’ Deviant Behaviour in South Africa: Evidence from Three Rural Communities in South Africa
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Less Parental Supervision
Because that’s when the parents get their pay or whatever, their grants… and then from what I have seen is they will end up drinking and then the children (adolescents) don’t have supervision and the fights or stabbings and those kinds of things you usually see around about the end of the month.(Stakeholder 1)
… our children that are younger are involved in crime due to a lack of parent supervision…(Stakeholder 14)
… 12 years. I’ve never seen it myself but from working at the clinic and things like that, people talk so yes, because also usually at the end of the month there is less parental supervision and incidents involving children, has just increased…(Stakeholder 1)
3.2. Lack of Parental Support and Knowledge of Adolescents’ Behaviour
In our community, our people lack a sense of responsibility. Children leave school, they don’t finish matric… and the parents don’t feel like taking responsibility for them because many times the child would say they don’t feel like going to school then the parent would say now what am I supposed to do? The mother does not feel like taking the child every day to school, she prefers to sit in the sun so it basically comes back to the lack of support and responsibility, our people do not have that, so the parents rather allow the children to leave school.(Stakeholder 5)
Like drug abuse, lacking parent skills, they don’t know how to raise the children properly. The parents don’t have parenting skills because they use drugs and alcohol.(Stakeholder 6)
3.3. Absenteeism
Fathers are not involved, they just gave up. Mothers when they are on drugs, the grandparents are there. They are responsible to raise the kids. I mean when you’re almost 60 years of age, you don’t want to sit up with a child screaming, shouting and kicking because it’s not your time to raise a kid.(Stakeholder 8)
Our children just drop out of school and just stand in front of the shops loafing for R5 or whatever, some get involved in crime at that age. And our parents are absent like in, I’m here in the flesh but I’m absent. They are busy with their own stuff so the children are on their own actually and you are not aware of what is going on in the child’s life even. The drug problem is so huge in Lamberts Bay.(Stakeholder 14)
3.4. Lack of Parental Discipline
Parents are the biggest problems nowadays, they do not commit to discipline, they do not commit to any routine.(Stakeholder 4)
I won’t say all of them but there are some of the parents that don’t really worry when the child who is 12 or 13 years goes out of the house and comes in at any time of the night. Then they want to fight with the children, but then the children are already grown because, at 12 or 13 years they are already grown so then they want to discipline the children, which is too late because you must discipline the child from an early age.(Stakeholder 11)
3.5. Parents’ Lack of Concern and Knowledge of the Child’s Behaviour
… then you tell the parents that the child misbehaving in class, that parent will go to school, and the school manager and the school secretary, all the teachers are wrong, that child is never wrong.(Stakeholder 4)
Yes and then currently it’s our drug use, yes tik is taking over our community and children just don’t listen…, parents refuse to believe, they see some differences in the child and that their behaviour has changed but they are ignorant they just don’t want to ask or know if something is wrong.(Stakeholder 5)
We have a big problem with children that do not attend school… we have very few parents that do something about the case….our parents just don’t care...the parents don’t worry about their children. As I said, the child can do it if he or she wants to.(Stakeholder 6)
3.6. The Inability of Parents to Be Positive Role Models
…they don’t know about doing sports and stuff like what youngsters are supposed to do, so they drink from an early age so now they are continuing the cycle of the parents drinking and abusing the mother or the girlfriend or stuff like that. So the parents drink in front of their children, they drink and they do drugs and they fight with the children you see? Those are their role models, so they have negative role models in the community who they look up to and think this is the way you must be and you must act.(Male stakeholder, 32 years old, Lamberts Bay)
4. Discussion
5. Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Participants (N = 23) | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Male | 8 | 34.8 |
Female | 15 | 65.2 |
Age | ||
20–29 | 4 | 17.4 |
30–39 | 10 | 43.5 |
40–49 | 4 | 17.4 |
50–59 | 4 | 17.4 |
60–69 | 1 | 4.3 |
Education | ||
High school | 2 | 8.7 |
Completed matric | 11 | 47.8 |
Diploma | 3 | 13 |
Degree | 5 | 21.7 |
Postgraduate | 2 | 8.7 |
Profession | ||
Health worker | 4 | 17.4 |
Child and youth worker | 4 | 17.4 |
Social worker | 7 | 30.4 |
Police officer | 1 | 4.3 |
General manager | 1 | 4.3 |
Cleaner | 6 | 26.1 |
Language | ||
English | 2 | 8.7 |
IsiXhosa | 17 | 73.9 |
Afrikaans | 4 | 17.4 |
Questions |
---|
1. What are the most prominent challenges faced in this community? 2. What factors contribute to the challenges you have noted? 3. Describe the state of adolescents living in this community? 4. What kind of behaviours are adolescents in this community involved in? 5. What are the factors influencing adolescents’ behaviours? 6. What can be done to improve the well-being of adolescents in this community? |
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Rachel, C.; Roman, N.V.; Donga, G.T. The Contribution of Parental Factors to Adolescents’ Deviant Behaviour in South Africa: Evidence from Three Rural Communities in South Africa. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 152. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11040152
Rachel C, Roman NV, Donga GT. The Contribution of Parental Factors to Adolescents’ Deviant Behaviour in South Africa: Evidence from Three Rural Communities in South Africa. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(4):152. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11040152
Chicago/Turabian StyleRachel, Chinyakata, Nicolette Vanessa Roman, and Gift T. Donga. 2022. "The Contribution of Parental Factors to Adolescents’ Deviant Behaviour in South Africa: Evidence from Three Rural Communities in South Africa" Social Sciences 11, no. 4: 152. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11040152
APA StyleRachel, C., Roman, N. V., & Donga, G. T. (2022). The Contribution of Parental Factors to Adolescents’ Deviant Behaviour in South Africa: Evidence from Three Rural Communities in South Africa. Social Sciences, 11(4), 152. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11040152