Parent–Child Conflict and Psychological Adjustment: The Serial Mediating Roles of Psychological Control and Basic Psychological Needs
Mingshu Chen, Wan Ding, Jingning Liu, Ningxin SuAlthough existing research has found that parent–child conflict significantly predicts children’s psychological adjustment, it remains unclear whether father–child and mother–child conflict exert distinct effects on psychological adjustment, the mediating processes through which they operate, and whether these processes vary across primary and secondary school stages. Using a three-wave longitudinal design, this study examined 1210 primary school students (Mage = 10.17, SDage = 0.85) and 973 secondary school students (Mage = 12.62, SDage = 1.36). A multiple mediation model integrating parallel and serial paths was constructed to investigate how father–child and mother–child conflict frequency respectively predicted four indicators of psychological adjustment (internalizing problems, externalizing problems, life satisfaction, and prosocial behavior) and to test the mediating roles of parental psychological control and basic psychological needs. Results showed the following: (1) parental psychological control and basic psychological needs served as significant independent mediators of the relationship between conflict frequency and psychological adjustment. In primary school, maternal psychological control emerged as the core mediator; in secondary school, the mediating role of paternal psychological control was significantly strengthened, and the basic psychological need mediated all associations between mother–child conflict and every adjustment indicator. (2) The serial mediating pathway “parental psychological control → basic psychological needs” was robust across both school stages. As a distal family stressor, parent–child conflict is indirectly transformed into maladjustment through a sequential process that first elevates psychological control and then thwarts basic psychological need. These findings illuminate a cascading mechanism underlying the impact of parent–child conflict on multifaceted adjustment and offer stage-specific guidance for targeted family interventions in primary and secondary school settings.