ABSTRACT
Using three-wave longitudinal data of 554 Chinese youth (mean age = 13.35 years; 50% girls; T1 = July 2020, T2 = January 2021, T3 = July 2021), this study examined how youth’s views of teens regarding family obligation predict their academic functioning and relationship with parents, with attention to the mediating role of youth’s sense of responsibility to parents. Results showed that views of teens regarding family obligation predicted youth’s greater academic delay of gratification, motivational response to academic failure, and attachment security to mother and father over time. Importantly, youth’s sense of responsibility to parents mediated the longitudinal associations between views of teens and their academic and social adjustment. Taken together, the findings elucidate why and how views of teens matter for positive youth development in a culturally sensitive manner.