fbpx
Wikipedia

Parenting styles

A parenting style is a pattern of behaviors, attitudes, and approaches that a parent uses when interacting with and raising their child. The study of parenting styles is based on the idea that parents differ in their patterns of parenting and that these patterns can have a significant impact on their children's development and well-being. Parenting styles are distinct from specific parenting practices, since they represent broader patterns of practices and attitudes that create an emotional climate for the child.[1] Parenting styles also encompass the ways in which parents respond to and make demands on their children.

Children go through many different stages throughout their childhood. Parents create their own parenting styles from a combination of factors that evolve over time. The parenting styles are subject to change as children begin to develop their own personalities. During the stage of infancy, parents try to adjust to a new lifestyle in terms of adapting and bonding with their new infant. Developmental psychologists distinguish between the relationship between the child and parent, which ideally is one of attachment, and the relationship between the parent and child, referred to as bonding. In the stage of adolescence, parents encounter new challenges, such as adolescents seeking and desiring freedom.[2]

Mother holding an infant child

A child's temperament and parents' cultural patterns have an influence on the kind of parenting style a child may receive.[3] The parenting styles that parents experience as children also influences the parenting styles they choose to use.[4]

Early researchers studied parenting along a range of dimensions, including levels of responsiveness, democracy, emotional involvement, control, acceptance, dominance, and restrictiveness.[1] In the 1960s, Diana Baumrind created a typology of three parenting styles, which she labeled as authoritative, authoritarian and permissive (or indulgent).[5] She characterized the authoritative style as an ideal balance of control and autonomy.[6] This typology became the dominant classification of parenting styles, often with the addition of a fourth category of indifferent or neglectful parents.[5] Baumrind's typology has been criticized as containing overly broad categorizations and an imprecise and overly idealized description of authoritative parenting.[7] Later researchers on parenting styles returned to focus on parenting dimensions and emphasized the situational nature of parenting decisions.[7][8]

Some early researchers found that children raised in a democratic home environment were more likely to be aggressive and exhibit leadership skills while those raised in a controlled environment were more likely to be quiet and non-resistant.[9] Contemporary researchers have emphasized that love and nurturing children with care and affection encourages positive physical and mental progress in children.[10] They have also argued that additional developmental skills result from positive parenting styles, including maintaining a close relationship with others, being self-reliant, and being independent.

Distinction with parenting practices edit

 
Father and children reading

According to a literature review by Christopher Spera (2005), Darling and Steinberg (1993) suggest that it is important to better understand the differences between parenting styles and parenting practices: "Parenting practices are defined as specific behaviors that parents use to socialize their children", while parenting style is "the emotional climate in which parents raise their children."[1] Others such as Lamborn and Dornbusch Darling and Steinberg assisted in the research focusing on impacts of parenting practices on adolescence achievement.[11]

One study association that has been made is the difference between "child's outcome and continuous measures of parental behavior." Some of the associations listed include: Support, Engagement, Warmth, Recognition, Control, Monitoring, and Severe punishment.[12][13] Parenting practices such as parental support, supervision and strict boundaries appear to be associated with higher school grades, fewer behavioral problems and better mental health.[14] These components have no age limit and can start in preschool all the way through college.[15]

Theories of child rearing edit

Beginning in the 17th century, two philosophers independently wrote works that have been widely influential in child-rearing. John Locke's 1693 book Some Thoughts Concerning Education is a well-known foundation for educational pedagogy from a Puritan standpoint. Locke highlights the importance of experiences to a child's development and recommends developing their physical habits first. In 1762, the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau published a volume on education, Emile: or, On Education.[16] He proposed that early education should be derived less from books and more from a child's interactions with the world. Among them, Rousseau is more in line with slow parenting, and Locke is more for concerted cultivation.[17]

 
Jean Piaget

Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development describes how children represent and reason about the world.[18] This is a developmental stage theory that consists of a Sensorimotor stage, Preoperational stage, Concrete operational stage, and Formal operational stage. Piaget was a pioneer in the field of child development and psychology and continues to influence parents, educators and other theorists with a significant effect on science.[19]

Erik Erikson, a developmental psychologist, proposed eight life stages through which each person must develop. In order to move through the eight stages, there is a crisis that must occur. Then there is a new dilemma that encourages the growth through the next stage.[20][21] In each stage, they must understand and balance two conflicting forces, and so parents might choose a series of parenting styles that helps each child as appropriate at each stage. The first five of his eight stages occur in childhood: The virtue of hope requires balancing trust with mistrust, and typically occurs from birth to one year old. Will balances autonomy with shame and doubt around the ages of two to three. Purpose balances initiative with guilt around the ages of four to six years. Competence balances industry against inferiority around ages seven to 12. Fidelity contrasts identity with role confusion, in ages 13 to 19. The remaining adult virtues are love, care and wisdom.[22]

Rudolf Dreikurs believed that pre-adolescent children's misbehavior was caused by their unfulfilled wish to be a member of a social group. He argued that they then act out a sequence of four mistaken goals: first they seek attention. If they do not get it, they aim for power, then revenge and finally feel inadequate. This theory is used in education as well as parenting, forming a valuable theory upon which to manage misbehavior.[23] Other parenting techniques should also be used to encourage learning and happiness. He emphasized the significance to establish a democratic family style that adopts a method of periodic democratic family councils while averting punishment.[24] He advances "logical and natural consequences" that teach children to be responsible and understand the natural consequences of proper rules of conduct and improper behavior.[25]

Frank Furedi is a sociologist with a particular interest in parenting and families. He believes that the actions of parents are less decisive than others claim. He describes the term infant determinism[26] as the determination of a person's life prospects by what happens to them during infancy, arguing that there is little or no evidence for its truth. While commercial, governmental and other interests constantly try to guide parents to do more and worry more for their children, he believes that children are capable of developing well in almost any circumstances. Furedi quotes Steve Petersen of Washington University in St. Louis: "development really wants to happen. A very poor environment is needed to interfere with development... [just] do not raise your child in a closet, starve them, or hit them on the head with a frying pan".[27] Similarly, the journalist Tim Gill has expressed concern about excessive risk aversion by parents and those responsible for children in his book No Fear.[28] This aversion limits the opportunities for children to develop sufficient adult skills, particularly in dealing with risk, but also in performing adventurous and imaginative activities.[29]

In 1998, independent scholar Judith Rich Harris published The Nurture Assumption, in which she argued that scientific evidence, especially behavioral genetics, showed that all different forms of parenting do not have significant effects on children's development, short of cases of severe child abuse or child neglect.[30] She proposes two main points for the effects: genetic effects, and social effects involved by the peer groups in which children participate.[31] The purported effects of different forms of parenting are all illusions caused by heredity, the culture at large, and children's own influence on how their parents treat them.[32] However, Harris was criticized for exaggerating the point of "parental upbringing seems to matter less than previously thought" to the implication that "parents do not matter."[33]

Moreover, recent studies suggest that parents can influence the outcomes of their children, it has been suggested that the personality traits of parents are better predictors for the outcomes of their children than those of the children,[34] and some recent studies have shown that parenting does have impacts on adoptive children as well. For example, it has been shown that warm adoptive parenting reduces internalizing and externalizing problems of the adoptive children over time.[35] Another study shows that warm adoptive parenting at 27 months predicted lower levels of child externalizing problems at ages 6 and 7.[36]

Baumrind's parenting typology edit

Diana Baumrind is a researcher who focused on the classification of parenting styles into what is now known as Baumrind’s parenting typology. In her research, she found what she considered to be the four basic elements that could help shape successful parenting: responsiveness vs. unresponsiveness and demanding vs. undemanding.[37] Parental responsiveness refers to the degree to which the parent responds to the child's needs in a supportive and accepting manner.[38][39][40][41] Parental Demandingness refers to the rules which the parent has in place for their child's behavior, the expectations for their children to comply with these rules, and the level of repercussions that follow if those rules are broken.[42] Through her studies Baumrind identified three initial parenting styles: Authoritative parenting, authoritarian parenting and permissive parenting. Maccoby and Martin expanded upon Baumrind's three original parenting styles by placing parenting styles into two distinct categories: demanding and undemanding.[43] With these distinctions, four new parenting styles were defined:

Maccoby and Martin's Four Parenting Styles
Baumrind's Three Parenting Styles
Demanding Undemanding
Responsive Authoritative/Propagative Indulgent
(Permissive)
Unresponsive Authoritarian/Totalitarian Neglectful

Baumrind believes that parents should be neither punishing nor apathetic.[44] Instead, they should make rules for their children and be affectionate with them. These parenting styles are designed to describe normal changes in parenting, rather than abnormal parenting, such as might be observed in abusive families.[45] In addition, parenting stress can often cause changes in parental behavior such as inconsistency, increased negative communication, decreased monitoring and/or supervision,[46] setting vague rules or limits on behavior, being more reactive and less proactive, and engaging in increasingly harsh disciplinary behaviors.

Chandler, Heffer, and Turner argue that parenting styles are associated with adolescent psychological and behavioral problems and may affect academic performance.[47]

The four styles edit

The four styles include Authoritative, Authoritarian, Neglectful, and Indulgent/Permissive.[48] Each style has been explained based on the definition and is elaborated considering demandingness and responsiveness.

Authoritative edit

The parent is demanding and responsive. When this style is systematically developed, it grows to fit the descriptions propagative parenting, democratic parenting, positive parenting and concerted cultivation.

Authoritative parenting is characterized by a child-centered approach that holds high expectations of maturity. Authoritative parents can understand how their children are feeling and teach them how to regulate their feelings. Even with high expectations of maturity, authoritative parents are usually forgiving of any possible shortcomings.[49] They often help their children to find appropriate outlets to solve problems. Authoritative parents encourage children to be independent but still place limits on their actions.[44] Extensive verbal give-and-take is not refused, and parents try to be warm and nurturing toward the child.[44] Authoritative parents are not usually as controlling as authoritarian parents, allowing the child to explore more freely, thus having them make their own decisions based upon their own reasoning. Often, authoritative parents produce children who are more independent and self-reliant.[50] Authoritative parenting styles are mainly produced in the context of high parental responses and high demands.[51]

Authoritative parents will set clear standards for their children, monitor the limits that they set, and also allow children to develop autonomy. They also expect mature, independent, and age-appropriate behavior of children. Punishments for misbehavior are measured and consistent, not arbitrary or violent. Often behaviors are not punished but the natural consequences of the child's actions are explored and discussed—allowing the child to see that the behavior is inappropriate and not to be repeated, rather than not repeated to merely avoid adverse consequences.[44] Authoritative parents set limits and demand maturity, and when punishing a child, authoritative parents are more likely to explain their reason for punishment.[52] In some cases, this may lead to more understanding and complying behavior from the child.[52] A child knows why they are being punished because an authoritative parent makes the reasons known. As a result, children of authoritative parents are more likely to be successful, well-liked by those around them, generous and capable of self-determination.[53]

Authoritarian edit

The parent is demanding but not responsive.

Authoritarian parenting is a restrictive, punishment-heavy parenting style in which parents make their children follow their directions with little to no explanation or feedback and focus on the child's and family's perception and status.[44][51] Corporal punishment, such as spanking, and yelling are a form of discipline often preferred by authoritarian parents. The goal of this style, at least when well-intentioned, is to teach the child to behave, survive, and thrive as an adult in a harsh and unforgiving society by preparing the child for negative responses such as anger and aggression that the child will face if their behavior is inappropriate. In addition, advocates of the authoritarian style often believe that the shock of aggression from someone from the outside world will affect children less because they are accustomed to both acute and chronic stress imposed by parents.[54]

Authoritarian parenting has distinctive effects on children:

  • Children raised using this type of parenting may have less social competence because the parent generally tells the child what to do instead of allowing the child to choose by themself, making the child appear to excel in the short term but limiting development in ways that are increasingly revealed as supervision and opportunities for direct parental control decline.[55]
  • Children raised by authoritarian parents tend to be conformist, highly obedient, quiet, and not very happy.[56] These children often experience depression and self-blame.[56]
  • For some children raised by authoritarian parents, these behaviors continue into adulthood.[56]
  • Children who are resentful of or angry about being raised in an authoritarian environment but have managed to develop high behavioral self-confidence often rebel in adolescence and/or young adulthood.[56]
  • Children who experience anger and resentment coupled with the downsides of both inhibited self-efficacy and high self-blame often retreat into escapist behaviors, including but not limited to substance abuse, and are at heightened risk for suicide.
  • Specific aspects of authoritarian styles prevalent among certain cultures and ethnic groups, most notably aspects of traditional Asian child-rearing practices sometimes described as authoritarian,[44] often continued by Asian American families and sometimes emulated by intensive parents from other cultures, may be associated with more positive median child outcomes than Baumrind's model predicts,[57] albeit at the risk of exacerbated downside outcomes exemplified by Asian cultural phenomena such as hikikomori and the heightened suicide rates found in South Korea, in India and by international observers of China before 2014.
  • Many Non-Western parents tend to have more of an Authoritarian parenting style rather than Authoritative because adult figures are generally more highly respected in other countries. Children are expected to comply with their parents rules without question. This is a common critique of Baumrind's Three Parenting Styles because Authoritarian parenting is generally associated with negative outcomes, however, many other cultures are considered to use an Authoritarian parenting style, and it is considered in those cultures not to negatively affect the child.[52]
Indulgent or permissive edit

The parent is responsive but not demanding.

Indulgent parenting, also called permissive, non-directive, lenient, libertarian,[58] or (by supporters) anti-authoritarian,[59] is characterized as having few behavioral expectations for the child. "Indulgent parenting is a style of parenting in which parents are very involved with their children but place few demands or controls on them".[44] Parents are nurturing and accepting, and are responsive to the child's needs and wishes. Indulgent parents do not require children to regulate themselves or behave appropriately. As adults, children of indulgent parents will pay less attention to avoiding behaviors that cause aggression in others.[60]

Permissive parents try to be "friends" with their child, and do not play a parental role.[61] The expectations of the child are very low, and there is little discipline. Permissive parents also allow children to make their own decisions, giving them advice as a friend. This type of parenting is very lax, with few punishments or rules.[61] Permissive parents also tend to give their children whatever they want and hope that they are appreciated for their accommodating style. Other permissive parents compensate for what they missed as children, and as a result give their children both the freedom and materials that they lacked in their childhood.[61] Baumrind's research on pre-school children with permissive parents found that the children were immature, lacked impulse control and were irresponsible.[62]

Children of permissive parents may tend to be more impulsive and as adolescents may engage more in misconduct such as drug use,[63] "Children never learn to control their own behavior and always expect to get their way."[44] But in the better cases they are emotionally secure, independent and are willing to learn and accept defeat. They mature quickly and are able to live life without the help of someone else.[64]

From a 2014 study,[65]

  • The teens least prone to heavy drinking had parents who scored high on both accountability and warmth.
  • So-called 'indulgent' parents, those low on accountability and high on warmth, nearly tripled the risk of their teen participating in heavy drinking.
  • 'Strict parents' or authoritarian parents – high on accountability and low on warmth – more than doubled their teen's risk of heavy drinking.[65]
Neglectful or uninvolved edit

The parent is not responsive and not demanding.[66]

Neglectful parents are unaware of what their children are doing, and if they find out, they feel indifferent towards them.[67] Sometimes parents can be neglectful because of stressors they are experiencing in their own life.[68]

Children of neglectful parents, also sometimes known as latchkey parents, are often lonely, sad, immature, and have a difficult time to adapting to social norms. They are more likely to end up in abusive relationships, perform risky behaviors, and have increased rates of injury. They can also struggle with low self-esteem and emotional neediness, which may be caused from children being left alone throughout their younger years.[69]

Cultural effects on children edit

Most studies, mainly in English-speaking countries, show that children of authoritative parents have the best outcomes in different domains (behavioral, psychological and social adjustment…).[70] The case might be different, however, for Asian populations, where the authoritarian style was found as good as the authoritative style. On the other hand, some studies have found a superiority of the indulgent style in Spain,[71] Portugal[72] or Brazil,[73] but the methodology of these studies has been contested.[74] More recently a study has shown that in Spain, while using the same questionnaire used in other countries, the authoritative style continues to be the best one for children.[75] Furthermore, a systematic review has shown that the results do not depend on the culture but on the instruments used: studies measuring control as coercion find a detrimental effect of such control on adolescents, and better outcomes for children of permissive parents; however, when behavioral control is measured, such control is positive, and authoritative parents get the best results.[76]

Criticism of Baumrind's typology edit

Baumrind's typology has received significant criticism for containing overly broad categorizations and an imprecise and overly idealized description of authoritative parenting.[7] Author Alfie Kohn argued that Baumrind's "favored approach [of authoritative parenting], supposedly a blend of firmness and caring, is actually quite traditional and control-oriented," adding that the typology serves to "blur the differences between 'permissive' parents who were really just confused and those who were deliberately democratic."[77] Kohn's preferred approach is anti-authoritarian but also encourages respectful adult guidance and unconditional love, an approach which is not accounted for in Baumrind's typology.

Dr. Wendy Grolnick has critiqued Baumrind's use of the term "firm control" in her description of authoritative parenting and argued that there should be clear differentiation between coercive power assertion (which is associated with negative effects on children) and the more positive roles of structure and high expectations.[78]

Catherine C. Lewis argued that the empirical research on authoritative parenting did not sufficiently account for the possibility that positive effects associated with parental control emerged from the child's willingness to obey rather than the parent's tendency to exercise control.[79] Lewis also argued that the studies did not sufficiently separate the effects of firm control from the effects of other parenting practices that tend to accompany it. Therefore, it is possible for the child's outcomes to be attributed to those accompanying parenting practices rather than to the measure of firm control.

Attachment theory edit

Attachment theory was created by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth.[80] This theory focuses on the attachment of parents and children (specifically through infancy), and the aspect of children staying in close distance with their caregiver who will protect them from the outside world.[80] The bond that is created between child and mother is a vital part of how the child will grow up. Attachment between a mother and her child can be seen by the “child’s cry’s, their smiles and if they cling to their mother”, babies also turn to these attachment techniques when they feel unsafe, scared or confused. However, when the stress is gone and they know they are safe due to that relationship the infant or child can then engage in activities to strengthen how they explore and view the world around them.[81]

This theory includes the possible types of attachment:

  • Secure attachment is when the child feels comfortable exploring their environment when their caregiver is not there, but uses them as a base for comfort and security if they become frightened.[82]
  • Insecure attachment is when the child is hesitant to explore the environment on their own, and display reluctance in accepting comfort from their parent.[80]

Attachment theory in adolescence edit

Although research on attachment theory has focused on infancy and early childhood, research has shown that the relationship between teens and their parents can be affected depending on whether they have a secure or insecure attachment between them.[80] A parent's interaction with their child during infancy creates an internal working model of attachment, which is the development of expectations that a child has for future relationships and interactions based on the interactions they had during infancy with their caregiver.[80] If an adolescent continues to have a secure attachment with their caregiver, they are more likely to talk to their guardian about their problems and concerns, have stronger interpersonal relationships with friends and significant others, and also have higher self-esteem.[80] Parents continue to maintain a secure attachment through adolescence by expressing understanding, good communication skills, and allowing their children to safely start doing things independently.[82]

Other parenting styles edit

Attachment parenting edit

Attachment parenting is a parenting style framed by psychological attachment theory. Attachment in psychology is defined as "a lasting emotional bond between people".[83] There are four main types of attachment: secure, insecure, resistant, and disorganized.[84]

  • Resistant attachment relationships are typically going to be characterized by the child's exaggerated expression of getting their needs met through attachment.[85] When the infant is in with their caregiver, they begin to act hesitant towards exploring their environment and care more about getting attention from the caregiver.[85]
  • Disorganized is when the child outwardly shows behaviors that are odd or ambivalent towards the parent, (i.e. when the child runs up to their parent, and then immediately pulls away, and turns around to run away, curling up in a ball, or even hitting the parent).[86]

Child-centered parenting edit

Child-centered parenting is a parenting style advocated by Blythe and David Daniel, which focuses on the real needs and the unique person-hood of each child.[87] Research has shown that child-centered parenting is difficult to get right.[88]

Positive parenting edit

Positive parenting is a parenting style which generally overlaps with authoritative parenting and is defined by consistent support and guidance throughout developmental stages.[89]

Concerted Cultivation is a specific form of positive parenting characterized by parents' attempts to foster their child's talents through organized extracurricular activities such as music lessons, sports/athletics, and academic enrichment.[90]

Narcissistic parenting edit

A narcissistic parent is a parent affected by narcissism or narcissistic personality disorder. Typically narcissistic parents are exclusively and possessively close to their children and may be especially envious of, and threatened by, their child's growing independence.[91] The result may be what has been termed a pattern of narcissistic attachment, with the child considered to exist solely for the parent's benefit.[92] Parents who are narcissistic in their parenting will be involved in some if not all of these traits:

  • self-importance
  • no respect for boundaries
  • communication as warfare
  • gaslighting
  • playing the victim
  • abusive behavior/ neglect [93]

Nurturant parenting edit

Nurturant parenting is defined by characteristics of being responsive and empathetic. It is a family model where children are expected to explore their surroundings with protection from their parents.[94] This style of parenting is encouraging and helps offer development opportunities for a child and their temperaments. A child's self-image, social skills, and academic performance will improve, impacting how they will grow up to be mature, happy, well-balanced adults.[95] It has been found that when families have low levels of nurturant-involved parenting the youth are more likely to get involved with illegal substances and underage drinking. This is an example of how powerful parenting styles are and the impact it has on children. Nurturant parenting is a warm and supportive environment for the children and there is a lack of hostility and rejection from the parents toward their kids.[96]

Overparenting edit

Overparenting is parents who try to involve themselves in every aspect of their child's life, often attempting to solve all their problems and stifling the child's ability to act independently or solve his or her own problems.[97] A helicopter parent is a colloquial early 21st-century term for a parent who pays extremely close attention to his or her children's experiences and problems and attempts to sweep all obstacles out of their paths, particularly at educational institutions. Overparenting limits a child's autonomy and essential development for independence. Helicopter parents are so named because they hover overhead like a helicopter, especially from late adolescence to early adulthood, during which time developing independence and self-sufficiency is critical to future success.[98] Modern communication technology has facilitated this style, allowing parents to monitor their children through cell phones, email and online monitoring of academic performance.[99]

Affectionless control edit

The affectionless control parental style combines a lack of warmth and caring (low parental care) with over-control (such as parental criticism, and intrusiveness). This has been linked to children's anxiety[100] and to dysfunctional attitudes and low self-esteem in the children,[101] although it is not necessarily the cause.[100] There is evidence that parental affectionless control is associated with suicidal behavior.[102]

Slow parenting edit

Slow parenting encourages parents to plan and organize less for their children, instead allowing them to enjoy their childhood and explore the world at their own pace. Electronics are limited, simplistic toys are utilized, and the child is allowed to develop their own interests and to grow into their own person with much family time, allowing children to make their own decisions.[103]

Idle parenting is a specific form of slow parenting according to which children can take care of themselves most of the time, and the parents would be happier if they spent more time taking care of themselves, too.

Toxic parenting edit

Toxic parenting is poor parenting, with a toxic relationship between the parent and child. It results in complete disruption of the child's ability to identify themselves and reduced self-esteem, neglecting the needs of the child. Abuse is sometimes seen in this parenting style.[104] Adults who had toxic parents are mostly unable to recognize toxic parenting behavior in themselves. Children with toxic and/or abusive parents often grow up with psychological and behavioral damage.[105] Some of the behaviors of toxic parenting include talking over their child, being in a cycle of negative thinking, being overly critical towards their children, and using guilt to control their child.[106]

Pathogenic parenting edit

Pathogenic parenting refers to parenting style practices that are so aberrant and distorted that they produce significant psychopathology in the child. This may lead to child psychological abuse (DSM-5 V995.51). It is generally used in the context of distortions to the child's attachment system since the attachment system does not spontaneously or independently dysfunctional.[107]

Dolphin parenting edit

Dolphin parenting is a term used by psychiatrist Shimi Kang and happiness researcher Shawn Achor to represent a parenting style seen as similar to the nature of dolphins, being "playful, social and intelligent".[108][109] It has been contrasted to "tiger" parenting.[108] According to Kang, dolphin parenting provides a balance between the strict approach of tiger parenting and the lack of rules and expectations that characterizes what she calls "jellyfish parents".[110] Dolphin parents avoid overscheduling activities for their children, refrain from being overprotective, and take into account the desires and goals of their children when setting expectations for behavior and academic success.[111]

'Ethnic minority' parenting style edit

'Ethnic Minority' parenting style is an ethnocentric term coined in the USA out of Authoritarian parenting, and it refers to a style characterized by exceptionally high academic achievements among children from Asian backgrounds. Ethnic Minority style differs from strict authoritarian parenting by being highly responsive towards children's needs, while also differing from authoritative parenting by maintaining high demands, and not placing children's needs as a priority. This style promotes high demandingness and high responsiveness together to produce high academic performance in children.[112]

Alloparenting parenting style edit

Alloparenting is the practice of co-parenting a child by biological parents and members of the extended family or community. This type of parenting is most prevalent in Central African countries, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic; especially in Akka foraging communities.[113] Alloparenting is considered to help alleviate parental burdens by utilizing the community and allowing biological parents more time to work or participate in social events.[114] Some historians, such as Stephanie Coontz, suggest that alloparenting as a parenting style helps children to understand love and trust through a widened perspective due to increased bonds formed between child and adult.[115]

Unconditional parenting edit

The unconditional parenting style is one where parents provide their children with love and support no matter what the situation.[116] This type of parenting does not involve rewards or punishments but instead focuses on building a strong relationship with your child. It can be beneficial as it provides a sense of security for children.

Commando Parenting is another style where parents essentially do whatever it takes to raise children in their desired way.[117]

Gentle Parenting edit

In The Gentle Parenting Book, Sarah Ockwell-Smith describes the discipline of gentle parenting as "being responsive to children's needs" and "recogniz[ing] that all children are individuals.".[118] With the help of sensitivity, respect, and understanding as well as the establishment of sound limits, gentle parenting aims  to raise children who are self-assured autonomous, and content. This method of parenting places a strong emphasis on age-appropriate growth. Traditional parenting methods emphasize rewards and discipline. You reward your kid with enjoyable activities, treats, and encouraging words when they behave well or do something nice. Instead of concentrating on punishment and incentive, gentle parenting focuses on improving a child's self-awareness and understanding of their own conduct. Gentle parenting emphasizes how the parent's feelings are impacted by the child's behavior. This instills in them the same teachings about repercussions as conventional parenting methods, but with an emphasis on emotion. The child is observing the parent's reactions and learning how those actions make the parent feel. One of the greatest worries about gentle parenting is that the parent might come off as more of a companion than a parent.[119]

Parenting Neurodivergent Children edit

Baumrind recommends implementing an accountable parenting approach. Research findings indicate that ADHD children are more negative and are often outspoken and dictatorial and show fewer inclinations to fixing issues. Researchers' findings showed that ADHD parents are less lenient but more strict in their parenting styles. Parents of children with ADHD and other parents share a comparable authoritative parenting approach. Gender has no bearing on parenting style, but parents of ADHD kids with greater schooling tend to be more permissive and authoritarian. Additionally, parents of children with ADHD who had lesser levels of schooling were more lax than parents of kids without ADHD.[120] These results suggest that families of children and teenagers with ADHD experience less family support and more behavioral and relational disturbances. When a parent adopts an autocratic parenting style, they are demanding but unresponsive. High standards and adherence to parental guidelines and directives define this parenting approach. Verbal conversation lacks emotional depth and is one-sided. When issuing orders, authoritarian parents frequently do not offer justification. These children are consequently lonely, depressed, susceptible, and wary. Additionally, in our research, parents of children with ADHD were less lax, which indicates that these parents have high expectations for their kids and exercise greater control over them. All of these things may be contributing factors to the signs of ADHD in kids and teenagers getting worse.[121]

Dysfunctional styles edit

Unhealthy parenting signs, which could lead to a family becoming dysfunctional include:[122]

  • Unrealistic expectations
  • Ridicule[123]
  • Conditional love[123]
  • Disrespect;[123] especially contempt.
  • Emotional intolerance (family members not allowed to express the "wrong" emotions.)[123]
  • Social dysfunction or isolation[123] (for example, parents unwilling to reach out to other families—especially those with children of the same gender and approximate age, or do nothing to help their "friendless" child.)
  • Stifled speech (children not allowed to dissent or question authority.)[123]
  • Denial of an "inner life" (children are not allowed to develop their own value systems.)[123]
  • Being under- or over-protective
  • Apathy ("I don't care!")
  • Belittling ("You can't do anything right!")
  • Shame ("Shame on you!")
  • Bitterness (regardless of what is said, using a bitter tone of voice.)
  • Hypocrisy ("Do as I say, not as I do.")
  • Lack of forgiveness for minor misdeeds or accidents
  • Judgmental statements or demonization ("You are a liar!")
  • Being overly critical and withholding proper praise. (experts say 80–90% praise, and 10–20% constructive criticism is the most healthy.)[124][125]
  • Double standards or giving "mixed messages" by having a dual system of values (i.e. one set for the outside world, another when in private, or teaching divergent values to each child.)
  • The absentee parent (seldom available for their child due to work overload, alcohol/drug abuse, gambling, or other addictions.)
  • Unfulfilled projects, activities, and promises affecting children ("We'll do it later.")
  • Giving to one child what rightly belongs to another
  • Gender prejudice (treats one gender of children fairly; the other unfairly.)
  • Discussion and exposure to sexuality: either too much, too soon or too little, too late
  • Faulty discipline based more on emotions or family politics than on established rules (e.g., punishment by "surprise".)
  • Having an unpredictable emotional state due to substance abuse, personality disorder(s), or stress
  • Parents always (or never) take their children's side when others report acts of misbehavior, or teachers report problems at school
  • Scapegoating (knowingly or recklessly blaming one child for the misdeeds of another)
  • "Tunnel vision" diagnosis of children's problems (for example, a parent may think their child is either lazy or has learning disabilities after he falls behind in school despite recent absence due to illness.)
  • Older siblings given either no or excessive authority over younger siblings with respect to their age difference and level of maturity.
  • Frequent withholding of consent ("blessing") for culturally common, lawful, and age-appropriate activities a child wants to take part in
  • The "know-it-all" (has no need to obtain child's side of the story when accusing, or listen to child's opinions on matters which greatly impact them.)
  • Regularly forcing children to attend activities for which they are extremely over- or under-qualified (e.g. using a preschool to babysit a typical nine-year-old boy, taking a young child to poker games, etc.)
  • Either being a miser ("scrooge") in totality or selectively allowing children's needs to go unmet (e.g. a father will not buy a bicycle for his son because he wants to save money for retirement or "something important".)
  • Disagreements about nature and nurture (parents, often non-biological, blame common problems on child's heredity, when faulty parenting may be the actual cause.)

"Children as pawns" edit

One common dysfunctional parental behavior is a parent's manipulation of a child in order to achieve some outcome adverse to the other parent's rights or interests. Examples include verbal manipulation such as spreading gossip about the other parent, communicating with the parent through the child (and in the process exposing the child to the risks of the other parent's displeasure with that communication) rather than doing so directly, trying to obtain information through the child (spying), or causing the child to dislike the other parent, with insufficient or no concern for the damaging effects of the parent's behavior on the child. While many instances of such manipulation occur in shared custody situations that have resulted from separation or divorce, it can also take place in intact families, where it is known as triangulation.[citation needed]

List of other dysfunctional styles edit

  • "Using" (destructively narcissistic parents who rule by fear and conditional love.)
  • Abusing (parents who use physical violence, or emotionally, or sexually abuse their children.)
  • Perfectionist (fixating on order, prestige, power, or perfect appearances, while preventing their child from failing at anything.)
  • Dogmatic or cult-like (harsh and inflexible discipline, with children not allowed, within reason, to dissent, question authority, or develop their own value system.)
  • Inequitable parenting (going to extremes for one child while continually ignoring the needs of another.)
  • Deprivation (control or neglect by withholding love, support, necessities, sympathy, praise, attention, encouragement, supervision, or otherwise putting their children's well-being at risk.)
  • Abuse among siblings (parents fail to intervene when a sibling physically or sexually abuses another sibling.)
  • Abandonment (a parent who willfully separates from their children, not wishing any further contact, and in some cases without locating alternative, long-term parenting arrangements, leaving them as orphans.)
  • Appeasement (parents who reward bad behavior—even by their own standards—and inevitably punish another child's good behavior in order to maintain the peace and avoid temper tantrums. "Peace at any price.")
  • Loyalty manipulation (giving unearned rewards and lavish attention trying to ensure a favored, yet rebellious child will be the one most loyal and well-behaved, while subtly ignoring the wants and needs of their most loyal child currently.)
  • "Helicopter parenting" (parents who micro-manage their children's lives or relationships among siblings—especially minor conflicts.)
  • "The deceivers" (well-regarded parents in the community, likely to be involved in some charitable/non-profit works, who abuse or mistreat one or more of their children.)
  • "Public image manager" (sometimes related to above, children warned to not disclose what fights, abuse, or damage happens at home, or face severe punishment "Don't tell anyone what goes on in this family".)
  • "The paranoid parent" (a parent having persistent and irrational fear accompanied by anger and false accusations that their child is up to no good or others are plotting harm.)
  • "No friends allowed" (parents discourage, prohibit, or interfere with their child from making friends of the same age and gender.)
  • Role reversal (parents who expect their minor children to take care of them instead.)
  • "Not your business" (children continuously told that a particular brother or sister who is often causing problems is none of their concern.)
  • Ultra-egalitarianism (either a much younger child is permitted to do whatever an older child may, or an older child must wait years until a younger child is mature enough.)
  • "The guard dog" (a parent who blindly attacks family members perceived as causing the slightest upset to their esteemed spouse, partner, or child.)
  • "My baby forever" (a parent who will not allow one or more of their young children to grow up and begin taking care of themselves.)
  • "The cheerleader" (one parent "cheers on" the other parent who is simultaneously abusing their child.)
  • "Along for the ride" (a reluctant de facto, step, foster, or adoptive parent who does not truly care about their non-biological child, but must co-exist in the same home for the sake of their spouse or partner) (See also: Cinderella effect).
  • "The politician" (a parent who repeatedly makes or agrees to children's promises while having little to no intention of keeping them.)
  • "It's taboo" (parents rebuff any questions children may have about sexuality, pregnancy, romance, puberty, certain areas of human anatomy, nudity, etc.)
  • Identified patient (one child, usually selected by the mother, who is forced into going to therapy while the family's overall dysfunction is kept hidden.)
  • Münchausen syndrome by proxy (a much more extreme situation than above, where the child is intentionally made ill by a parent seeking attention from physicians and other professionals.)

Cross-cultural variation edit

Many of these theories of parenting styles are almost entirely based on evidence from high-income countries, especially the USA. However, there are many fundamental differences in child development between high and low-income countries, due to differences in parenting styles and practices.[126] For instance, in sub-Saharan Africa children are likely to have more than one main caregiver, to acquire language in a bilingual environment, and to play in mixed aged peer groups.[127] However, when comparing African American caregiving among lower, middle, and upper socioeconomic families, the number of non-parental caregivers decreases as economic resources increase.[128] In addition, international studies have found Chinese parents to be more concerned with impulse control, which may explain the greater use of authoritarian style as compared to U.S. parents.[129][130] Thus, social values and norms within a culture influence the choice of parenting style that will help the child conform to cultural expectations.[130]

There is evidence to suggest cultural differences in the way children respond to parenting practices.[131][132] In particular, there is ongoing debate surrounding physical discipline and corporal punishment of children.[131][133][134] with some authors suggesting it is less harmful in ethnic groups or countries where it is culturally normative,[135] such as several low income countries, where the prevalence rate remains high.[136] Lansford et al (2004) reported harsh parenting was associated with more externalising behaviours in European American compared with African American adolescents.[137] Resolving these issues is important in assessing the transferability of parenting interventions across cultures and from high to low income countries in order to improve child development and health outcomes.[138]

Some parenting styles correlate with positive outcomes across cultures, while other parenting styles correlate with outcomes that are specific to one culture. For example, authoritative parenting is related to positive self-esteem and academic outcomes for both Chinese and European American adolescents, but the positive effects of the "ethnic minority" parenting style are specific to Chinese adolescents.[129] There is also evidence to suggest that there is not only cultural variation but variations across settings within a culture.[139] For example, Mexican American and African American parental expectations of obedience and autonomy differ in school and other social settings vs. home.[139] A study comparing Indian parents who stayed in India and Indian parents who immigrated to a different country shows that the influence cultural traditions have on parenting changes according to social/geographical context, concluding that immigrant parents place greater emphasis on traditional Indian culture in order to preserve traditional practices in their new country.[140] Thus, in immigrant families, parenting styles according to culture may be the result of conscious reinforcement as opposed to unconscious tradition.[140]

Differences for male and female children edit

Parents tend to adopt different parenting behaviors based on the sex of their child.[141] Fathers more so than mothers. Studies have shown that fathers are more emotionally and mentally reactive with their daughters.[142] This may cause fathers to have a different parental style between their daughters and sons. For example, fathers tend to be more strict with their daughters but tend to be more lenient with their sons overall.

However, studies have shown mothers don't see a difference emotionally or mentally for their daughters and/or sons.[142] Mothers tend to have the same parenting style no matter what the gender of their child is.

Differential parenting edit

Differential parenting is when siblings individually receive different parenting styles or behavior from their parents.[52] This most often occurs in families where the children are adolescents, and is highly related as to how each child interprets their parent's behavior.[52] Research shows that children who view their parents as authoritative generally tend to be happier and functioning at a higher level in a variety of areas.[52] When analyzing the level of differentiation within a family, it is important to look at the difference in the level of responsiveness (including specific characteristics of warmth, sensitivity, and positivity), control, leniency, and negativity that are directed at each individual child.[143] Differential parenting often leads to a non-shared environment, which is when siblings have different experiences growing up in the same household, and different personal outcomes based on their environment.[144]

In most families with more than one child, parents will adjust their parenting styles according to what their child best responds to, however, a high level of differential parenting can have negative effects on children.[143] The effects that differential parenting has on families differs, but in general there are usually negative effects on both children.[143] The severity of effects is more extreme for the child who is viewed as disfavored.[143] The "disfavored" child generally has a variety of personal development issues such as low self-esteem and depression.[143] The favored child tends to have higher self-esteem and more friends in school.[143] However, studies show that both favored and disfavored children tend to have problems with interpersonal relationships, as well as problems with managing their emotions.[143] A high level of differential parenting also influences how siblings treat one another, and the level of conflict in the sibling relationship.[143] Research shows that this is due in part to children imitating their parents' behaviors.[143]

One theory being discussed in relation to differential parenting is social comparison.[145] Social comparison is the outcome of adolescents comparing the treatment they receive from their guardians versus the treatment their siblings receive. While these comparisons on treatment may be subconscious, it is vital to a child's formation of self-worth and their perceived role within the family dynamic.[146] As the years go on and adolescents grow and mature, their perception of differential parenting within their household becomes prominent and plays a role in forming one's own identity. If the adolescent views inequitable treatment intentional or not on behalf of the guardian's report have shown internalized symptoms of depression, anxiety, etc., and external outburst such as risk-taking, and delinquency to non-verbally communicate to a guardian unfair treatment.[146] Parental differential treatment is seen by researchers as “arguably a subjective phenomenon” because it is based on perception.[146] Much research has still yet to be completed on this subject but based on what is known can be attributed to the social comparison arising from differential parenting.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Spera, Christopher (1 June 2005). "A Review of the Relationship Among Parenting Practices, Parenting Styles, and Adolescent School Achievement". Educational Psychology Review. 17 (2): 125–146. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.596.237. doi:10.1007/s10648-005-3950-1. S2CID 11050947.
  2. ^ Davey, Graham, ed. (30 June 2006). "Parenting". Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Psychology. Routledge. ISBN 9780340812389.
  3. ^ Berger S., Kathleen (18 February 2011). The Developing Person Through the Life Span (8th ed.). Worth Publishers. pp. 273–278. ISBN 978-1-4292-3203-6.
  4. ^ Firestone, Lisa (30 July 2015). "7 Ways Your Childhood Affects How You'll Parent". Psychology Today.
  5. ^ a b Bornstein, M.H.; Zlotnik, D. (2008). "Parenting Styles and their Effects". Encyclopedia of Infant and Early Childhood Development. pp. 496–509. doi:10.1016/B978-012370877-9.00118-3. ISBN 978-0-12-370877-9.
  6. ^ Baumrind, Diana (1966). "Effects of Authoritative Parental Control on Child Behavior". Child Development. 37 (4): 887–907. doi:10.2307/1126611. JSTOR 1126611.
  7. ^ a b c Smetana, Judith G (June 2017). "Current research on parenting styles, dimensions, and beliefs". Current Opinion in Psychology. 15: 19–25. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2017.02.012. PMID 28813261.
  8. ^ Skinner, Ellen; Johnson, Sandy; Snyder, Tatiana (May 2005). "Six Dimensions of Parenting: A Motivational Model". Parenting. 5 (2): 175–235. doi:10.1207/s15327922par0502_3. S2CID 46064817.
  9. ^ Baldwin, Alfred L. (1948). "Socialization and the Parent-Child Relationship". Child Development. 19 (3): 127–136. doi:10.2307/1125710. JSTOR 1125710.
  10. ^ Biglan, Anthony; Flay, Brian R.; Embry, Dennis D.; Sandler, Irwin N. (2012). "The critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human well-being". American Psychologist. 67 (4): 257–271. doi:10.1037/a0026796. PMC 3621015. PMID 22583340.
  11. ^ Steinberg, Laurence; Lamborn, Susie D.; Dornbusch, Sanford M.; Darling, Nancy (October 1992). "Impact of Parenting Practices on Adolescent Achievement: Authoritative Parenting, School Involvement, and Encouragement to Succeed". Child Development. 63 (5): 1266–1281. doi:10.2307/1131532. JSTOR 1131532. PMID 1446552.
  12. ^ Amato, Paul R. (February 1988). "Family processes and the competence of adolescents and primary school children". Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 18 (1): 39–53. doi:10.1007/bf02139245. PMID 24271603. S2CID 35288922.
  13. ^ Kurdek, Lawrence A.; Fine, Mark A. (August 1994). "Family Acceptance and Family Control as Predictors of Adjustment in Young Adolescents: Linear, Curvilinear, or Interactive Effects?". Child Development. 65 (4): 1137–1146. doi:10.2307/1131310. JSTOR 1131310. PMID 7956470.
  14. ^ Gray, Marjory Roberts; Steinberg, Laurence (August 1999). "Unpacking Authoritative Parenting: Reassessing a Multidimensional Construct". Journal of Marriage and the Family. 61 (3): 574. doi:10.2307/353561. JSTOR 353561.
  15. ^ Amato, Paul R.; Fowler, Frieda (August 2002). "Parenting Practices, Child Adjustment, and Family Diversity". Journal of Marriage and Family. 64 (3): 703–716. doi:10.1111/j.1741-3737.2002.00703.x. S2CID 143550911.
  16. ^ Rousseau, Jean-Jacques (1762). Émile, ou De l'éducation. Amsterdam, J. Néaulme.
  17. ^ Irvine, Paul (2014). "Rousseau, Jean J. (1712–1778)". Encyclopedia of Special Education. doi:10.1002/9781118660584.ese2104. ISBN 978-0-470-64216-0.
  18. ^ White, F.; Hayes, B. & Livesey, D. (2005). Developmental Psychology: From Infancy to Adulthood. New South Wales: Pearson Education Australia.
  19. ^ Babakr, Zana H.; Mohamedamin, Pakstan; Kakamad, Karwan (2019). "Piaget's Cognitive Developmental Theory: Critical Review". Education Quarterly Reviews. 2 (3): 517–524. doi:10.31014/aior.1993.02.03.84. S2CID 264860064. ERIC EJ1274368.
  20. ^ Erikson, Erik (1968). Identity: Youth and Crisis. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 15–19. ISBN 0393311449.
  21. ^ Constantinople, Anne (July 1969). "An Eriksonian measure of personality development in college students". Developmental Psychology. 1 (4): 357–372. doi:10.1037/h0027706.
  22. ^ Sheehy, Noel; Chapman, Antony J.; Conroy, Wenday A., eds. (2016). "Erikson, Erik Homburger". Biographical Dictionary of Psychology. p. 170. doi:10.4324/9780203827086. ISBN 978-1-136-79885-6.
  23. ^ Wright, Benjamin (Winter 1957). "Psychology in the Classroom by Rudolf Dreikurs". The School Review. 65 (4): 490–492. doi:10.1086/442418.
  24. ^ Goddard, H. Wallace; Dennis, Steven A. (2003). "Parenting Education". In James J. Ponzetti Jr (ed.). International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family. Gale, Farmington, USA. from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  25. ^ Roeckelein, J. E., ed. (2006). "Developmental Theory". Elsevier's Dictionary of Psychological Theories. Elsevier. pp. 159–162. ISBN 978-0-08-046064-2.
  26. ^ Furedi, Frank (2001). Paranoid Parenting: Why Ignoring the Experts May Be Best for Your Child. Allen Lane. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-7139-9488-9.
  27. ^ Petersen, Steve (January 10, 2000). "Baby Steps". from the original on December 31, 2009. Retrieved December 6, 2009.
  28. ^ Gill, Tim (2007). (PDF). Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-903080-08-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-06.
  29. ^ Gill, Tim (2007). "Playing it too safe". RSA Journal. 154 (5528): 46–51. JSTOR 41379798.
  30. ^ Gerstel, Naomi (Mar 1999). "The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way they Do by Judith Rich Harris". Contemporary Sociology. 28 (2): 174–176. doi:10.2307/2654856. JSTOR 2654856. PMC 1127334. PMID 10807640.
  31. ^ Smith, P. "Group socialization theory". Reader's guide to the social sciences.
  32. ^ Perkins, Marian (May 13, 2000). "'The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out The Way They Do' by Judith Rich Harris". British Medical Journal. 320 (7245): 1347. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7245.1347. PMC 1127334. PMID 10807640.
  33. ^ A position not actually taken by the author, but apparently it was feared that "lay readers" would still interpret the book in this way, as in "Will it free some to mistreat their kids, since 'it doesn't matter'?", with this fear being attributed to "psychologist Frank Farley of Temple University, president of the APA division that honored Harris" by Begley, Sharon (1998-09-29). "The Parent Trap". Newsweek.
  34. ^ Wright, Amanda J.; Jackson, Joshua J. (6 January 2023). "Is parent personality associated with adolescent outcomes for their child? A response surface analysis approach". Infant and Child Development. doi:10.1002/icd.2395.
  35. ^ Paine, Amy L.; Perra, Oliver; Anthony, Rebecca; Shelton, Katherine H. (August 2021). "Charting the trajectories of adopted children's emotional and behavioral problems: The impact of early adversity and postadoptive parental warmth". Development and Psychopathology. 33 (3): 922–936. doi:10.1017/S0954579420000231. PMC 8374623. PMID 32366341.
  36. ^ Reuben, Julia D.; Shaw, Daniel S.; Neiderhiser, Jenae M.; Natsuaki, Misaki N.; Reiss, David; Leve, Leslie D. (August 2016). "Warm Parenting and Effortful Control in Toddlerhood: Independent and Interactive Predictors of School-Age Externalizing Behavior". Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology. 44 (6): 1083–1096. doi:10.1007/s10802-015-0096-6. PMC 5097859. PMID 26496906.
  37. ^ Baumrind, D. (February 1967). "Child care practices anteceding three patterns of preschool behavior". Genetic Psychology Monographs. 75 (1): 43–88. PMID 6032134.
  38. ^ Baumrind, Diana (March 1978). "Parental Disciplinary Patterns and Social Competence in Children". Youth & Society. 9 (3): 239–267. doi:10.1177/0044118x7800900302. S2CID 140984313.
  39. ^ Arnett, Jeffrey (2013). Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood: A Cultural Approach. United States of America: Pearson Education. p. 182. ISBN 9780205892495.
  40. ^ Slater, A.; Bremner, J.G. (2017). An Introduction to Developmental Psychology. Wiley. p. 592. ISBN 978-1-118-76720-7. from the original on 8 April 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  41. ^ Darling, Nancy; Steinberg, Laurence (2017). "Parenting Style as Context: An Integrative Model". Interpersonal Development. pp. 161–170. doi:10.4324/9781351153683-8. ISBN 978-1-351-15368-3.
  42. ^ Arnett, Jeffrey (2013). Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood: A Cultural Approach. United States Of America: Pearson. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-205-89249-5.
  43. ^ Maccoby, E.E.; Martin, J.A. (1983). "Socialization in the context of the family: Parent-child interaction". In Mussen, P.H.; Hetherington, E.M. (eds.). Manual of child psychology, Vol. 4: Social development. New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 1–101.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h Santrock, J.W. (2007). A topical approach to life-span development, third Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill.[page needed]
  45. ^ Parenting Style and Its Correlates 2009-04-23 at the Wayback Machine athealth.com. Retrieved 2009-06-14
  46. ^ "Become a Positive Parent - 5 Types of Parenting Styles". LifeGuideBlog. 2019-10-03. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  47. ^ Turner, Erlanger A.; Chandler, Megan; Heffer, Robert W. (May 2009). "The Influence of Parenting Styles, Achievement Motivation, and Self-Efficacy on Academic Performance in College Students". Journal of College Student Development. 50 (3): 337–346. doi:10.1353/csd.0.0073. S2CID 14083139.
  48. ^ "Encyclopedia". Parenting. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  49. ^ Strassen Berger, Kathleen (2011). The Developing Person Through the Life Span. Worth Publishers. p. 273.
  50. ^ . Pagewise. Archived from the original on 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2007-09-23.
  51. ^ a b "Parenting Styles"[full citation needed]
  52. ^ a b c d e f Arnett, Jeffrey (2013). Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood: A Cultural Approach. United States Of America: Pearson. pp. 182–188. ISBN 978-0-205-89249-5.
  53. ^ Stassen Berger, Kathleen (2011). The Developing Person Through the Life Span. Worth Publishing. pp. 273–274.
  54. ^ Shaw, Zoey A.; Starr, Lisa R. (December 2019). "Intergenerational Transmission of Emotion Dysregulation: The Role of Authoritarian Parenting Style and Family Chronic Stress". Journal of Child and Family Studies. 28 (12): 3508–3518. doi:10.1007/s10826-019-01534-1. S2CID 203481307.
  55. ^ Moore, Shirley G. (1992). The Role of Parents in the Development of Peer Group Competence (Report). ERIC ED346992.
  56. ^ a b c d Stassen Berger, Kathleen (2011). The Developing Person Through the Lifespan. Worth Publishers. p. 274.
  57. ^ Chao, Ruth K. (1994). "Beyond Parental Control and Authoritarian Parenting Style: Understanding Chinese Parenting through the Cultural Notion of Training". Child Development. 65 (4): 1111–1119. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.1994.tb00806.x. PMID 7956468. S2CID 45541038.
  58. ^ What's Your Parenting Style? 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine Parents. The Anti-Drug. National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. Retrieved 2009-06-14
  59. ^ Rönsch, Hendrik (2020). "Effectiveness of laws and policies governing permissive parenting in pursuit of the reduction of severe child abuse in Germany". Children and Youth Services Review. 119: 105510. doi:10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.105510. S2CID 226315069.
  60. ^ Masud, Hamid; Ahmad, Muhammad Shakil; Cho, Ki Woong; Fakhr, Zainab (August 2019). "Parenting Styles and Aggression Among Young Adolescents: A Systematic Review of Literature" (PDF). Community Mental Health Journal. 55 (6): 1015–1030. doi:10.1007/s10597-019-00400-0. PMID 31102163. S2CID 156055591.
  61. ^ a b c Rosenthal, Maryann. "Knowing Yourself and Your Children". www.drma.com. from the original on 24 August 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  62. ^ Dornbusch, Sanford; Ritter, Philip; Leiderman, P; Robert, Donald; Fraleigh, Michael (1987). "The Relation of Parenting Style to Adolescent School Performance". Child Development. 58 (5): 1244–1257. doi:10.2307/1130618. JSTOR 1130618. PMID 3665643. S2CID 8123752.
  63. ^ Becoña, Elisardo; Martínez, Úrsula; Calafat, Amador (March 2013). "Parental permissiveness, control, and affect and drug use among adolescents". Psicothema. 25 (3): 292–298. doi:10.7334/psicothema2012.294. PMID 23910741. ProQuest 2778325105.
  64. ^ "Parenting". www.kingdomsolutions.us. Retrieved 2019-12-06.[dead link]
  65. ^ a b Verzello, Amanda (2018-07-20). . News. Brigham Young University. Archived from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  66. ^ Deater-Deckard, Kirby (2013). "The Social Environment and the Development of Psychopathology". In Zelazo, Philip David (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of Developmental Psychology, Vol. 2: Self and Other. pp. 527–548. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199958474.013.0021. ISBN 978-0-19-995847-4.
  67. ^ Arora, Monika (Nov 2014). "The Impact of Authoritative & Neglectful Parenting Style on Educational Performance of Learners at High School Level" (PDF). International Journals of Multidisciplinary Research. 3: 2.
  68. ^ Dhaliwal, Ritika (21 September 2018). "Parental neglect and its effect". White Swan Foundation. Retrieved 2022-05-05.
  69. ^ Chan, T. W.; Koo, A. (June 2011). "Parenting Style and Youth Outcomes in the UK". European Sociological Review. 27 (3): 385–399. doi:10.1093/esr/jcq013.
  70. ^ Darling, Nancy (March 1999). Parenting Style and Its Correlates (Report). ERIC ED427896.
  71. ^ Musitu, G.; García, F. (2004). "Consequences of the family socialization in the Spanish culture". Psicothema. 16 (2): 288–293. from the original on 2016-10-03.
  72. ^ Rodrigues, Yara; Veiga, Feliciano; Fuentes, María C.; García, Fernando (11 March 2013). "Parenting and Adolescents' Self-esteem: The Portuguese Context". Revista de Psicodidactica. 18 (2): 395–416. doi:10.1387/RevPsicodidact.6842.
  73. ^ Martínez, Isabel; García, José Fernando; Yubero, Santiago (June 2007). "Parenting Styles and Adolescents' Self-Esteem in Brazil". Psychological Reports. 100 (3): 731–745. doi:10.2466/pr0.100.3.731-745. hdl:10578/1956. PMID 17688087. S2CID 21462532.
  74. ^ Oliva, Alfredo (12 January 2006). "Relaciones familiares y desarrollo adolescente". Anuario de Psicología/The UB Journal of Psychology: 209–224. hdl:11441/67352. ProQuest 2681622081.
  75. ^ Osorio, Alfonso; González-Cámara, Marta (November 2016). "Testing the alleged superiority of the indulgent parenting style among Spanish adolescents". Psicothema. 28 (4): 414–420. doi:10.7334/psicothema2015.314. PMID 27776610.
  76. ^ González-Cámara, Marta; Osorio, Alfonso; Reparaz, Charo (2019). "Measurement and Function of the Control Dimension in Parenting Styles: A Systematic Review". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 16 (17): 3157. doi:10.3390/ijerph16173157. PMC 6747547. PMID 31470633.
  77. ^ Kohn, Alfie (2006). Unconditional Parenting: Moving from Rewards and Punishments to Love and Reason. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7434-8748-1.[page needed]
  78. ^ Grolnick, Wendy S. (2012). "The Relations among Parental Power Assertion, Control, and Structure: Commentary on Baumrind". Human Development. 55 (2): 57–64. doi:10.1159/000338533. JSTOR 26764606. S2CID 144535005.
  79. ^ Lewis, Catherine C. (November 1981). "The effects of parental firm control: A reinterpretation of findings". Psychological Bulletin. 90 (3): 547–563. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.90.3.547.
  80. ^ a b c d e f Arnett, Jeffrey Jensen (2013). Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood: A Cultural Approach. United States of America: Pearson Education. pp. 188–190. ISBN 9780205892495.
  81. ^ Moretti, Marlene (2004). "Adolescent-parent attachment: Bonds that support healthy development". Paediatrics & Child Health. 9 (8). Oxford University Press: 551–555. doi:10.1093/pch/9.8.551. PMC 2724162. PMID 19680483.
  82. ^ a b Bretherton, Inge (September 1992). "The origins of attachment theory: John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth". Developmental Psychology. 28 (5): 759–775. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.28.5.759.
  83. ^ Stassen Berger, Kathleen (2011). The Developing Person Through the Life Span. p. 194.
  84. ^ Stassen Berger, Kathleen (2011). The Developing Person Through the Life Span. p. 196.
  85. ^ a b "AboutKidsHealth". www.aboutkidshealth.ca. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
  86. ^ "Disorganized Attachment: How Disorganized Attachments Form & How They Can Be Healed". PsychAlive. 2013-06-11. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  87. ^ wethechildrenfoundation.com
  88. ^ Mascolo. "The Failure of Child-Centered Parenting". Psychology Today. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  89. ^ Walton, Stephen. "The Positive parenting centre". www.the-positive-parenting-centre.com. from the original on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
  90. ^ Cheadle, Jacob E. (Jan 2008). "Educational Investment, Family Context, and Children's Math and Reading Growth from Kindergarten through the Third Grade". Sociology of Education. 81 (1): 1–31. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.451.9878. doi:10.1177/003804070808100101. JSTOR 20452721. S2CID 34912567.
  91. ^ Stephen E. Levich, Clone Being (2004) p. 31 and p.89-91
  92. ^ David Stafford & Liz Hodgkinson, Codependency (London 1995) p. 41
  93. ^ Quirke, Michael G.; Marriage, Licensed; Therapist, Family (2021-06-21). "Traits of Children with Narcissistic Parents". Michael G. Quirke, MFT. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  94. ^ Oyserman, Daphna; Radin, Norma; Saltz, Eli (1 June 1994). "Predictors of nurturant parenting in teen mothers living in three generational families". Child Psychiatry and Human Development. 24 (4): 215–230. doi:10.1007/BF02353198. hdl:2027.42/43953. PMID 8082418. S2CID 470045.
  95. ^ Singhal, Kushal (2019-03-03). "Nurturant Parenting: Characteristics & Impact on Kids – Cafewhiz". Cafe whiz. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  96. ^ Weymouth, Bridget; Fosco, Gregory; Feinberg, Mark (2017). "Nurturant-Involved Parenting and Adolescent Substance Use: Examining an Internalizing Pathway through Adolescent Social Anxiety Symptoms and Substance Refusal Efficacy". Development and Psychopathology. 31 (1). PubMed Central: 247–260. doi:10.1017/S0954579417001766. PMC 5991983. PMID 29212564.
  97. ^ Winner, Nathan A.; Nicholson, Bonnie C. (November 2018). "Overparenting and Narcissism in Young Adults: The Mediating Role of Psychological Control". Journal of Child and Family Studies. 27 (11): 3650–3657. doi:10.1007/s10826-018-1176-3. S2CID 150247085.
  98. ^ Jackson, L. J. (November 2010). "Smothering Mothering: 'Helicopter parents' are landing big in child care cases". ABA Journal. 96 (11): 18–19. JSTOR 20789779.
  99. ^ Gordon, Larry; Kim, Victoria (24 January 2008). "Hovering Parents No Big Deal for Freshmen". Los Angeles Times. p. B1.
  100. ^ a b Paul C. McCabe; Steven R. Shaw (23 February 2010). Psychiatric Disorders: Current Topics and Interventions for Educators. Corwin Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-1-4129-6876-8. from the original on 8 April 2019. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  101. ^ Paul R. Robbins (24 October 2008). Understanding Depression (2nd ed.). McFarland. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-7864-5263-7. from the original on 8 April 2019. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
  102. ^ Goschin S, Briggs J, Blanco-Lutzen S, Cohen LJ, Galynker I (2013). "Parental affectionless control and suicidality". Journal of Affective Disorders (Review). 151 (1): 1–6. doi:10.1016/j.jad.2013.05.096. PMID 23820097.
  103. ^ Belkin, Lisa (8 April 2009). "What is Slow-Parenting?". Motherlode Blog. The New York Times.
  104. ^ "12 Types of Parenting Styles and Child Discipline Strategies". Positive-parenting-ally.com. from the original on 2012-04-27. Retrieved 2012-05-02.
  105. ^ Al Odhayani, Abdulaziz; Watson, William J.; Watson, Lindsay (August 2013). "Behavioural consequences of child abuse". Canadian Family Physician. 59 (8): 831–836. PMC 3743691. PMID 23946022.
  106. ^ "4 Examples of Toxic Parenting and How to Fix Them".
  107. ^ Foundations: An Attachment-Based Model of Parental Alienation. C. A. Childress, 2015[page needed]
  108. ^ a b Berl, Rachel Pomerance (August 1, 2013). "Dolphin Parenting: Raising Kids to Be Smart and Happy". U.S. News & World Report. from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
  109. ^ Kang, Shimi (2014). The Dolphin Way: A Parent's Guide to Raising Healthy, Happy, and Motivated Kids—Without Turning into a Tiger. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc. ISBN 978-0-399-16604-4.
  110. ^ Kang, Shimi (2014-09-09). . Parenting.com. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
  111. ^ Kang, Shimi (May 11, 2014). "A Case for Parenting the Dolphin–Not Tiger–Mom Way". Time. from the original on October 14, 2015. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
  112. ^ Huang, Grace H. C.; Gove, Mary (1 March 2015). "Asian Parenting Styles and Academic Achievement: Views from Eastern and Western Perspectives". Education. 135 (3): 389–397. Gale A406162572.
  113. ^ Meehan, Courtney L. (March 2005). "The effects of residential locality on parental and alloparental investment among the Aka foragers of the central African Republic". Human Nature. 16 (1): 58–80. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.585.4382. doi:10.1007/s12110-005-1007-2. PMID 26189516. S2CID 24960799.
  114. ^ Hardy, Sarah (2016-04-27). "Alloparenting and How it Really Does Take a Village to Raise a Child". Motherhood in Point of Fact. from the original on December 6, 2018. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  115. ^ Marsh, Abigail - Edge.org {website} (2017). "What Scientific Term or Concept Ought to be More Widely Known?". Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  116. ^ Smith, Amy - AmyandRose.com {website} (2021). "16 Parenting Styles - Psychology and Impact on Children". Retrieved June 3, 2022.
  117. ^ "Is Commando Parenting style good for your child?". 24 September 2020.
  118. ^ "What 'gentle parenting' can teach us about care, relationships, and communication". Popular Science. 2021-07-28. Retrieved 2023-03-27.
  119. ^ "What Is Gentle Parenting?". Cleveland Clinic. 2022-08-05. Retrieved 2023-03-27.
  120. ^ Firouzkouhi Moghaddam, Mahboobeh; Assareh, Marzeyeh; Heidaripoor, Amirhossein; Eslami Rad, Raheleh; Pishjoo, Masoud (20 December 2013). "The Study of Comprising Parenting Style between Children with ADHD and Normal Children". Archives of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy. 15 (4): 45–49. doi:10.12740/app/19375.
  121. ^ Stefanidi, Evropi; Schöning, Johannes; Feger, Sebastian S.; Marshall, Paul; Rogers, Yvonne; Niess, Jasmin (2022). "Designing for Care Ecosystems: A Literature Review of Technologies for Children with ADHD". Interaction Design and Children. pp. 13–25. doi:10.1145/3501712.3529746. ISBN 978-1-4503-9197-9.
  122. ^ Blair, Justice; Blair, Rita (April 1990). The Abusing Family (Revised ed.). Insight Books. ISBN 978-0306434419.
  123. ^ a b c d e f g Neuharth, Dan (1999). If You Had Controlling Parents: How to Make Peace with Your Past and Take Your Place in the World. Diane Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0788193835.
  124. ^ "Praise, encouragement and rewards". Raising Children Network. 2011-04-10. from the original on 2019-03-28.
  125. ^ Chavez, Holly (2 January 2016). "13 Signs Of A Toxic Parent That Many People Don't Realize". Lifehack.
  126. ^ Chang, Mimi (2007-01-01). Cultural differences in parenting styles and their effects on teens' self-esteem, perceived parental relationship satisfaction, and self-satisfaction (thesis thesis). Carnegie Mellon University.
  127. ^ Serpell, Robert; Marfo, Kofi (December 2014). "Some Growth Points in African Child Development Research: Child Development in Africa: Views From Inside". New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development. 2014 (146): 97–112. doi:10.1002/cad.20075. PMID 25512048.
  128. ^ Roopnarine, Jaipaul L.; Fouts, Hillary N.; Lamb, Michael E.; Lewis-Elligan, Tracey Y. (September 2005). "Mothers' and Fathers' Behaviors Toward Their 3- to 4-Month-Old Infants in Lower, Middle, and Upper Socioeconomic African American Families". Developmental Psychology. 41 (5): 723–732. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.41.5.723. PMID 16173870.
  129. ^ a b Li, Yan; Costanzo, Philip R.; Putallaz, Martha (29 October 2010). "Maternal Socialization Goals, Parenting Styles, and Social-Emotional Adjustment Among Chinese and European American Young Adults: Testing a Mediation Model". The Journal of Genetic Psychology. 171 (4): 330–362. doi:10.1080/00221325.2010.505969. PMID 21171548. S2CID 23895038.
  130. ^ a b Porter, Christian; Hart, Craig; Yang, Chongming; Robinson, Clyde; Frost Olsen, Susanne; Zeng, Qing; Olsen, Joseph; Jin, Shenghua (2005). "A comparative study of child temperament and parenting in Beijing, China and the western United States". International Journal of Behavioral Development. 29 (6): 541–551. doi:10.1080/01650250500147402.
  131. ^ a b Gershoff, Elizabeth Thompson (2002). "Corporal punishment by parents and associated child behaviors and experiences: A meta-analytic and theoretical review". Psychological Bulletin. 128 (4): 539–579. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.128.4.539. PMID 12081081. S2CID 2393109.
  132. ^ Yasui, Miwa; Dishion, Thomas J. (25 June 2007). "The Ethnic Context of Child and Adolescent Problem Behavior: Implications for Child and Family Interventions". Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review. 10 (2): 137–179. doi:10.1007/s10567-007-0021-9. PMID 17588150. S2CID 3133120.
  133. ^ Norman, Rosana E.; Byambaa, Munkhtsetseg; De, Rumna; Butchart, Alexander; Scott, James; Vos, Theo (27 November 2012). "The Long-Term Health Consequences of Child Physical Abuse, Emotional Abuse, and Neglect: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis". PLOS Medicine. 9 (11): e1001349. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001349. PMC 3507962. PMID 23209385.
  134. ^ Vittrup, Brigitte; Holden, George W. (May 2010). "Children's assessments of corporal punishment and other disciplinary practices: The role of age, race, SES, and exposure to spanking". Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology. 31 (3): 211–220. doi:10.1016/j.appdev.2009.11.003.
  135. ^ Lansford, Jennifer E. (2010). "The Special Problem of Cultural Differences in Effects of Corporal Punishment". Law and Contemporary Problems. 73 (2): 89–106. JSTOR 25766388. Gale A242509166.
  136. ^ UNICEF (2010). Child disciplinary practices at home: Evidence from a range of Low-and Middle-Income Countries (Report).
  137. ^ Lansford, Jennifer E.; Deater-Deckard, Kirby; Dodge, Kenneth A.; Bates, John E.; Pettit, Gregory S. (May 2004). "Ethnic differences in the link between physical discipline and later adolescent externalizing behaviors". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 45 (4): 801–812. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7610.2004.00273.x. PMC 2772061. PMID 15056311.
  138. ^ Gardner, Frances; Montgomery, Paul; Knerr, Wendy (November 2016). "Transporting Evidence-Based Parenting Programs for Child Problem Behavior (Age 3–10) Between Countries: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis". Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology. 45 (6): 749–762. doi:10.1080/15374416.2015.1015134. PMID 25785902.
  139. ^ a b Tamis-LeMonda, Catherine S.; Way, Niobe; Hughes, Diane; Yoshikawa, Hirokazu; Kalman, Ronit Kahana; Niwa, Erika Y. (February 2008). "Parents' Goals for Children: The Dynamic Coexistence of Individualism and Collectivism in Cultures and Individuals". Social Development. 17 (1): 183–209. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9507.2007.00419.x.
  140. ^ a b Sapru, Saloni (September 2006). "Parenting and Adolescent Identity: A Study of Indian Families in New Delhi and Geneva". Journal of Adolescent Research. 21 (5): 484–513. doi:10.1177/0743558406291766. S2CID 145443797.
  141. ^ Putnam, Jodi; A, Judith; Walls, Myers; Love, Dee. "Influence on children's gender development". www.extension.purdue.edu. from the original on 3 September 2013. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  142. ^ a b Mascaro, Jennifer S.; Rentscher, Kelly E.; Hackett, Patrick D.; Mehl, Matthias R.; Rilling, James K. (June 2017). "Child gender influences paternal behavior, language, and brain function". Behavioral Neuroscience. 131 (3): 262–273. doi:10.1037/bne0000199. PMC 5481199. PMID 28541079.
  143. ^ a b c d e f g h i Pauker, Sharon; Perlman, Michal; Prime, Heather; Jenkins, Jennifer M. (August 2017). "Differential parenting and children's social understanding". Social Development. 26 (3): 645–657. doi:10.1111/sode.12214.
  144. ^ Rauer, Amy J.; Volling, Brenda L. (December 2007). "Differential parenting and sibling jealousy: Developmental correlates of young adults' romantic relationships". Personal Relationships. 14 (4): 495–511. doi:10.1111/j.1475-6811.2007.00168.x. PMC 2396512. PMID 19050748.
  145. ^ Festinger, Leon (May 1954). "A Theory of Social Comparison Processes". Human Relations. 7 (2): 117–140. doi:10.1177/001872675400700202. S2CID 18918768.
  146. ^ a b c Rolan, Emily; Marceau, Kristine (December 2018). "Individual and Sibling Characteristics: Parental Differential Treatment and Adolescent Externalizing Behaviors". Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 47 (12): 2535–2553. doi:10.1007/s10964-018-0892-8. PMC 6329658. PMID 29992521.

References edit

  • Hong, J.S. (2021). "Parenting style and bullying and victimization: Comparing foreign-born Asian, US-born Asian, and White American adolescents". Journal of Family Violence. 36 (7): 799–811. doi:10.1007/s10896-020-00176-y. S2CID 220294556.
  • Fatima, S. (2022). "Parenting styles, moral identity and prosocial behaviors in adolescents". Current Psychology. 41 (2): 902–910. doi:10.1007/s12144-020-00609-3. S2CID 212920276.
  • Younesian, S. (2021). "Maternal interactive beliefs and style as predictors of language development in preterm and full-term children". Journal of Child Language. 48 (2): 215–243. doi:10.1017/S0305000920000148. PMID 32618520. S2CID 220328655.
  • Sanvictores T, Mendez MD. (2023). "Types of Parenting Styles and Effects on Children". StatPearls. StatPearls. PMID 33760502.
  • dangx111 (5 Nov 2011). "The Four Types of Parenting Styles". from the original on 19 January 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)[better source needed]
  • Zhang, X. (2021). "Resting heart rate mediates the relationship between parenting style and callous-unemotional traits in Chinese children". Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology. 49 (11): 1419–1430. doi:10.1007/s10802-021-00834-9. PMID 34128174. S2CID 235438369.
  • Ong, M.Y. (2018). "The influence of perceived parenting styles on socio-emotional development from pre-puberty into puberty". European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. 27 (1): 37–46. doi:10.1007/s00787-017-1016-9. PMC 5799331. PMID 28631023.
  • Edenroth-Cato, F. (2020). "Motherhood and highly sensitive children in an online discussion forum". Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine. 24 (4): 442–458. doi:10.1177/1363459318812003. PMID 30458638. S2CID 53943559.Barnhart, C.; Raval, V.; Jansari, A.; Raval, P. (2013). "Perception of Parenting Style Among College Students in India and the United States". Journal of Child Family Stud. 22 (5): 684–693. doi:10.1007/s10826-012-9621-1. S2CID 145393764.
  • Bornstein, M.; Putnick, D. (2012). "Cognitive and Socioemotional Caregiving in Developing Countries". Child Development. 83 (1): 46–61. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2011.01673.x. PMC 3270892. PMID 22277006.
  • Pomeranz, E.; Wang, Q. (2009). "The Role of Parental Control in Children's Development in Western and East Asia Countries". Current Directions in Psychological Science. 18 (5): 285–289. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8721.2009.01653.x. S2CID 145272128.
  • "Ch. 1 Introduction - Psychology | OpenStax". openstax.org. 8 December 2014. Retrieved 2022-01-22.

Further reading edit

  • Bower, Bruce (September 2011). "Humans: Recession alters parenting style: Mothers with gene variant became more aggressive". Science News. 180 (7): 9. doi:10.1002/scin.5591800706.
  • Robert Feldman, PhD at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Child Development Third Edition
  • Morris, A. S., Cui, L., & Steinberg, L. (2013). Parenting research and themes: What we have learned and where to go next. In R. E. Larzelere, A. S. Morris, & A. W. Harrist (Eds.), Authoritative parenting: Synthesizing nurturance and discipline for optimal child development (pp. 35–58). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
  • Harris. Judith R.. "The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do," New York Times 1998.
  • Warash, Bobbie. "Are Middle-Class Parents Authoritative with a Touch of Permissiveness?." Delta Kappa Gamma Bulletin 74. 22007 28-31.
  • Chua, Amy. Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior The Wall Street Journal
  • Estep, Hanna M.; Olson, James N. (December 2011). "Parenting style, academic dishonesty, and infidelity in college students". College Student Journal. 45 (4): 830–839. Gale A278276704.
  • Grobman, K.H. (2003). Diana Baumrind's (1966) Prototypical Descriptions of 3 Parenting Styles. Retrieved from Diana Baumrind & Parenting Styles
  • Rinaldi, Christina M.; Howe, Nina (April 2012). "Mothers' and fathers' parenting styles and associations with toddlers' externalizing, internalizing, and adaptive behaviors" (PDF). Early Childhood Research Quarterly. 27 (2): 266–273. doi:10.1016/j.ecresq.2011.08.001.
  • Rivers, J.; Mullis, A. K.; Fortner, L. A.; Mullis, R. L. (2012). "Relationships Between Parenting Styles and the Academic Performance of Adolescents". Journal of Family Social Work. 15 (3): 202–216. doi:10.1080/10522158.2012.666644. S2CID 144485738.
  • Schary, D. P.; Cardinal, B. J.; Loprinzi, P. D. (2012). "Parenting style associated with sedentary behaviour in preschool children". Early Child Development & Care. 182 (8): 1015–1026. doi:10.1080/03004430.2012.678596. S2CID 144427759.
  • Williams, K.; Ciarrochi, J.; Heaven, P. (2012). "Inflexible Parents, Inflexible Kids: A 6-Year Longitudinal Study of Parenting Style and the Development of Psychological Flexibility in Adolescents". Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 41 (8): 1053–1066. doi:10.1007/s10964-012-9744-0. PMID 22311519. S2CID 207207009.
  • Spera, C (2005). "A review of the relationship among parenting practices, parenting styles, and adolescent school achievement". Educational Psychology Review. 17 (2): 125–146. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.596.237. doi:10.1007/s10648-005-3950-1. S2CID 11050947.
  • "Attachment Parenting: Q&A with Lysa Parker, co-chairman of Attachment Parenting International." Bundoo.com. Retrieved from Attachment Parenting: Q&A with Lysa Parker

parenting, styles, parenting, style, pattern, behaviors, attitudes, approaches, that, parent, uses, when, interacting, with, raising, their, child, study, parenting, styles, based, idea, that, parents, differ, their, patterns, parenting, that, these, patterns,. A parenting style is a pattern of behaviors attitudes and approaches that a parent uses when interacting with and raising their child The study of parenting styles is based on the idea that parents differ in their patterns of parenting and that these patterns can have a significant impact on their children s development and well being Parenting styles are distinct from specific parenting practices since they represent broader patterns of practices and attitudes that create an emotional climate for the child 1 Parenting styles also encompass the ways in which parents respond to and make demands on their children Children go through many different stages throughout their childhood Parents create their own parenting styles from a combination of factors that evolve over time The parenting styles are subject to change as children begin to develop their own personalities During the stage of infancy parents try to adjust to a new lifestyle in terms of adapting and bonding with their new infant Developmental psychologists distinguish between the relationship between the child and parent which ideally is one of attachment and the relationship between the parent and child referred to as bonding In the stage of adolescence parents encounter new challenges such as adolescents seeking and desiring freedom 2 Mother holding an infant childA child s temperament and parents cultural patterns have an influence on the kind of parenting style a child may receive 3 The parenting styles that parents experience as children also influences the parenting styles they choose to use 4 Early researchers studied parenting along a range of dimensions including levels of responsiveness democracy emotional involvement control acceptance dominance and restrictiveness 1 In the 1960s Diana Baumrind created a typology of three parenting styles which she labeled as authoritative authoritarian and permissive or indulgent 5 She characterized the authoritative style as an ideal balance of control and autonomy 6 This typology became the dominant classification of parenting styles often with the addition of a fourth category of indifferent or neglectful parents 5 Baumrind s typology has been criticized as containing overly broad categorizations and an imprecise and overly idealized description of authoritative parenting 7 Later researchers on parenting styles returned to focus on parenting dimensions and emphasized the situational nature of parenting decisions 7 8 Some early researchers found that children raised in a democratic home environment were more likely to be aggressive and exhibit leadership skills while those raised in a controlled environment were more likely to be quiet and non resistant 9 Contemporary researchers have emphasized that love and nurturing children with care and affection encourages positive physical and mental progress in children 10 They have also argued that additional developmental skills result from positive parenting styles including maintaining a close relationship with others being self reliant and being independent Contents 1 Distinction with parenting practices 2 Theories of child rearing 2 1 Baumrind s parenting typology 2 1 1 The four styles 2 1 1 1 Authoritative 2 1 1 2 Authoritarian 2 1 1 3 Indulgent or permissive 2 1 1 4 Neglectful or uninvolved 2 1 2 Cultural effects on children 2 2 Criticism of Baumrind s typology 3 Attachment theory 3 1 Attachment theory in adolescence 3 2 Other parenting styles 3 2 1 Attachment parenting 3 2 2 Child centered parenting 3 2 3 Positive parenting 3 2 4 Narcissistic parenting 3 2 5 Nurturant parenting 3 2 6 Overparenting 3 2 7 Affectionless control 3 2 8 Slow parenting 3 2 9 Toxic parenting 3 2 10 Pathogenic parenting 3 2 11 Dolphin parenting 3 2 12 Ethnic minority parenting style 3 2 13 Alloparenting parenting style 3 2 14 Unconditional parenting 3 2 14 1 Gentle Parenting 3 2 14 2 Parenting Neurodivergent Children 4 Dysfunctional styles 4 1 Children as pawns 4 2 List of other dysfunctional styles 5 Cross cultural variation 6 Differences for male and female children 7 Differential parenting 8 See also 9 Citations 10 References 11 Further readingDistinction with parenting practices edit nbsp Father and children readingAccording to a literature review by Christopher Spera 2005 Darling and Steinberg 1993 suggest that it is important to better understand the differences between parenting styles and parenting practices Parenting practices are defined as specific behaviors that parents use to socialize their children while parenting style is the emotional climate in which parents raise their children 1 Others such as Lamborn and Dornbusch Darling and Steinberg assisted in the research focusing on impacts of parenting practices on adolescence achievement 11 One study association that has been made is the difference between child s outcome and continuous measures of parental behavior Some of the associations listed include Support Engagement Warmth Recognition Control Monitoring and Severe punishment 12 13 Parenting practices such as parental support supervision and strict boundaries appear to be associated with higher school grades fewer behavioral problems and better mental health 14 These components have no age limit and can start in preschool all the way through college 15 Theories of child rearing editBeginning in the 17th century two philosophers independently wrote works that have been widely influential in child rearing John Locke s 1693 book Some Thoughts Concerning Education is a well known foundation for educational pedagogy from a Puritan standpoint Locke highlights the importance of experiences to a child s development and recommends developing their physical habits first In 1762 the French philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau published a volume on education Emile or On Education 16 He proposed that early education should be derived less from books and more from a child s interactions with the world Among them Rousseau is more in line with slow parenting and Locke is more for concerted cultivation 17 nbsp Jean PiagetJean Piaget s theory of cognitive development describes how children represent and reason about the world 18 This is a developmental stage theory that consists of a Sensorimotor stage Preoperational stage Concrete operational stage and Formal operational stage Piaget was a pioneer in the field of child development and psychology and continues to influence parents educators and other theorists with a significant effect on science 19 Erik Erikson a developmental psychologist proposed eight life stages through which each person must develop In order to move through the eight stages there is a crisis that must occur Then there is a new dilemma that encourages the growth through the next stage 20 21 In each stage they must understand and balance two conflicting forces and so parents might choose a series of parenting styles that helps each child as appropriate at each stage The first five of his eight stages occur in childhood The virtue of hope requires balancing trust with mistrust and typically occurs from birth to one year old Will balances autonomy with shame and doubt around the ages of two to three Purpose balances initiative with guilt around the ages of four to six years Competence balances industry against inferiority around ages seven to 12 Fidelity contrasts identity with role confusion in ages 13 to 19 The remaining adult virtues are love care and wisdom 22 Rudolf Dreikurs believed that pre adolescent children s misbehavior was caused by their unfulfilled wish to be a member of a social group He argued that they then act out a sequence of four mistaken goals first they seek attention If they do not get it they aim for power then revenge and finally feel inadequate This theory is used in education as well as parenting forming a valuable theory upon which to manage misbehavior 23 Other parenting techniques should also be used to encourage learning and happiness He emphasized the significance to establish a democratic family style that adopts a method of periodic democratic family councils while averting punishment 24 He advances logical and natural consequences that teach children to be responsible and understand the natural consequences of proper rules of conduct and improper behavior 25 Frank Furedi is a sociologist with a particular interest in parenting and families He believes that the actions of parents are less decisive than others claim He describes the term infant determinism 26 as the determination of a person s life prospects by what happens to them during infancy arguing that there is little or no evidence for its truth While commercial governmental and other interests constantly try to guide parents to do more and worry more for their children he believes that children are capable of developing well in almost any circumstances Furedi quotes Steve Petersen of Washington University in St Louis development really wants to happen A very poor environment is needed to interfere with development just do not raise your child in a closet starve them or hit them on the head with a frying pan 27 Similarly the journalist Tim Gill has expressed concern about excessive risk aversion by parents and those responsible for children in his book No Fear 28 This aversion limits the opportunities for children to develop sufficient adult skills particularly in dealing with risk but also in performing adventurous and imaginative activities 29 In 1998 independent scholar Judith Rich Harris published The Nurture Assumption in which she argued that scientific evidence especially behavioral genetics showed that all different forms of parenting do not have significant effects on children s development short of cases of severe child abuse or child neglect 30 She proposes two main points for the effects genetic effects and social effects involved by the peer groups in which children participate 31 The purported effects of different forms of parenting are all illusions caused by heredity the culture at large and children s own influence on how their parents treat them 32 However Harris was criticized for exaggerating the point of parental upbringing seems to matter less than previously thought to the implication that parents do not matter 33 Moreover recent studies suggest that parents can influence the outcomes of their children it has been suggested that the personality traits of parents are better predictors for the outcomes of their children than those of the children 34 and some recent studies have shown that parenting does have impacts on adoptive children as well For example it has been shown that warm adoptive parenting reduces internalizing and externalizing problems of the adoptive children over time 35 Another study shows that warm adoptive parenting at 27 months predicted lower levels of child externalizing problems at ages 6 and 7 36 Baumrind s parenting typology edit Diana Baumrind is a researcher who focused on the classification of parenting styles into what is now known as Baumrind s parenting typology In her research she found what she considered to be the four basic elements that could help shape successful parenting responsiveness vs unresponsiveness and demanding vs undemanding 37 Parental responsiveness refers to the degree to which the parent responds to the child s needs in a supportive and accepting manner 38 39 40 41 Parental Demandingness refers to the rules which the parent has in place for their child s behavior the expectations for their children to comply with these rules and the level of repercussions that follow if those rules are broken 42 Through her studies Baumrind identified three initial parenting styles Authoritative parenting authoritarian parenting and permissive parenting Maccoby and Martin expanded upon Baumrind s three original parenting styles by placing parenting styles into two distinct categories demanding and undemanding 43 With these distinctions four new parenting styles were defined Maccoby and Martin s Four Parenting Styles Baumrind s Three Parenting StylesDemanding UndemandingResponsive Authoritative Propagative Indulgent Permissive Unresponsive Authoritarian Totalitarian NeglectfulBaumrind believes that parents should be neither punishing nor apathetic 44 Instead they should make rules for their children and be affectionate with them These parenting styles are designed to describe normal changes in parenting rather than abnormal parenting such as might be observed in abusive families 45 In addition parenting stress can often cause changes in parental behavior such as inconsistency increased negative communication decreased monitoring and or supervision 46 setting vague rules or limits on behavior being more reactive and less proactive and engaging in increasingly harsh disciplinary behaviors Chandler Heffer and Turner argue that parenting styles are associated with adolescent psychological and behavioral problems and may affect academic performance 47 The four styles edit The four styles include Authoritative Authoritarian Neglectful and Indulgent Permissive 48 Each style has been explained based on the definition and is elaborated considering demandingness and responsiveness Authoritative edit See also Nurturant parent model The parent is demanding and responsive When this style is systematically developed it grows to fit the descriptions propagative parenting democratic parenting positive parenting and concerted cultivation Authoritative parenting is characterized by a child centered approach that holds high expectations of maturity Authoritative parents can understand how their children are feeling and teach them how to regulate their feelings Even with high expectations of maturity authoritative parents are usually forgiving of any possible shortcomings 49 They often help their children to find appropriate outlets to solve problems Authoritative parents encourage children to be independent but still place limits on their actions 44 Extensive verbal give and take is not refused and parents try to be warm and nurturing toward the child 44 Authoritative parents are not usually as controlling as authoritarian parents allowing the child to explore more freely thus having them make their own decisions based upon their own reasoning Often authoritative parents produce children who are more independent and self reliant 50 Authoritative parenting styles are mainly produced in the context of high parental responses and high demands 51 Authoritative parents will set clear standards for their children monitor the limits that they set and also allow children to develop autonomy They also expect mature independent and age appropriate behavior of children Punishments for misbehavior are measured and consistent not arbitrary or violent Often behaviors are not punished but the natural consequences of the child s actions are explored and discussed allowing the child to see that the behavior is inappropriate and not to be repeated rather than not repeated to merely avoid adverse consequences 44 Authoritative parents set limits and demand maturity and when punishing a child authoritative parents are more likely to explain their reason for punishment 52 In some cases this may lead to more understanding and complying behavior from the child 52 A child knows why they are being punished because an authoritative parent makes the reasons known As a result children of authoritative parents are more likely to be successful well liked by those around them generous and capable of self determination 53 Authoritarian edit See also Strict father model The parent is demanding but not responsive Authoritarian parenting is a restrictive punishment heavy parenting style in which parents make their children follow their directions with little to no explanation or feedback and focus on the child s and family s perception and status 44 51 Corporal punishment such as spanking and yelling are a form of discipline often preferred by authoritarian parents The goal of this style at least when well intentioned is to teach the child to behave survive and thrive as an adult in a harsh and unforgiving society by preparing the child for negative responses such as anger and aggression that the child will face if their behavior is inappropriate In addition advocates of the authoritarian style often believe that the shock of aggression from someone from the outside world will affect children less because they are accustomed to both acute and chronic stress imposed by parents 54 Authoritarian parenting has distinctive effects on children Children raised using this type of parenting may have less social competence because the parent generally tells the child what to do instead of allowing the child to choose by themself making the child appear to excel in the short term but limiting development in ways that are increasingly revealed as supervision and opportunities for direct parental control decline 55 Children raised by authoritarian parents tend to be conformist highly obedient quiet and not very happy 56 These children often experience depression and self blame 56 For some children raised by authoritarian parents these behaviors continue into adulthood 56 Children who are resentful of or angry about being raised in an authoritarian environment but have managed to develop high behavioral self confidence often rebel in adolescence and or young adulthood 56 Children who experience anger and resentment coupled with the downsides of both inhibited self efficacy and high self blame often retreat into escapist behaviors including but not limited to substance abuse and are at heightened risk for suicide Specific aspects of authoritarian styles prevalent among certain cultures and ethnic groups most notably aspects of traditional Asian child rearing practices sometimes described as authoritarian 44 often continued by Asian American families and sometimes emulated by intensive parents from other cultures may be associated with more positive median child outcomes than Baumrind s model predicts 57 albeit at the risk of exacerbated downside outcomes exemplified by Asian cultural phenomena such as hikikomori and the heightened suicide rates found in South Korea in India and by international observers of China before 2014 Many Non Western parents tend to have more of an Authoritarian parenting style rather than Authoritative because adult figures are generally more highly respected in other countries Children are expected to comply with their parents rules without question This is a common critique of Baumrind s Three Parenting Styles because Authoritarian parenting is generally associated with negative outcomes however many other cultures are considered to use an Authoritarian parenting style and it is considered in those cultures not to negatively affect the child 52 Indulgent or permissive edit The parent is responsive but not demanding Indulgent parenting also called permissive non directive lenient libertarian 58 or by supporters anti authoritarian 59 is characterized as having few behavioral expectations for the child Indulgent parenting is a style of parenting in which parents are very involved with their children but place few demands or controls on them 44 Parents are nurturing and accepting and are responsive to the child s needs and wishes Indulgent parents do not require children to regulate themselves or behave appropriately As adults children of indulgent parents will pay less attention to avoiding behaviors that cause aggression in others 60 Permissive parents try to be friends with their child and do not play a parental role 61 The expectations of the child are very low and there is little discipline Permissive parents also allow children to make their own decisions giving them advice as a friend This type of parenting is very lax with few punishments or rules 61 Permissive parents also tend to give their children whatever they want and hope that they are appreciated for their accommodating style Other permissive parents compensate for what they missed as children and as a result give their children both the freedom and materials that they lacked in their childhood 61 Baumrind s research on pre school children with permissive parents found that the children were immature lacked impulse control and were irresponsible 62 Children of permissive parents may tend to be more impulsive and as adolescents may engage more in misconduct such as drug use 63 Children never learn to control their own behavior and always expect to get their way 44 But in the better cases they are emotionally secure independent and are willing to learn and accept defeat They mature quickly and are able to live life without the help of someone else 64 From a 2014 study 65 The teens least prone to heavy drinking had parents who scored high on both accountability and warmth So called indulgent parents those low on accountability and high on warmth nearly tripled the risk of their teen participating in heavy drinking Strict parents or authoritarian parents high on accountability and low on warmth more than doubled their teen s risk of heavy drinking 65 Neglectful or uninvolved edit The parent is not responsive and not demanding 66 Neglectful parents are unaware of what their children are doing and if they find out they feel indifferent towards them 67 Sometimes parents can be neglectful because of stressors they are experiencing in their own life 68 Children of neglectful parents also sometimes known as latchkey parents are often lonely sad immature and have a difficult time to adapting to social norms They are more likely to end up in abusive relationships perform risky behaviors and have increased rates of injury They can also struggle with low self esteem and emotional neediness which may be caused from children being left alone throughout their younger years 69 Cultural effects on children edit Most studies mainly in English speaking countries show that children of authoritative parents have the best outcomes in different domains behavioral psychological and social adjustment 70 The case might be different however for Asian populations where the authoritarian style was found as good as the authoritative style On the other hand some studies have found a superiority of the indulgent style in Spain 71 Portugal 72 or Brazil 73 but the methodology of these studies has been contested 74 More recently a study has shown that in Spain while using the same questionnaire used in other countries the authoritative style continues to be the best one for children 75 Furthermore a systematic review has shown that the results do not depend on the culture but on the instruments used studies measuring control as coercion find a detrimental effect of such control on adolescents and better outcomes for children of permissive parents however when behavioral control is measured such control is positive and authoritative parents get the best results 76 Criticism of Baumrind s typology edit Baumrind s typology has received significant criticism for containing overly broad categorizations and an imprecise and overly idealized description of authoritative parenting 7 Author Alfie Kohn argued that Baumrind s favored approach of authoritative parenting supposedly a blend of firmness and caring is actually quite traditional and control oriented adding that the typology serves to blur the differences between permissive parents who were really just confused and those who were deliberately democratic 77 Kohn s preferred approach is anti authoritarian but also encourages respectful adult guidance and unconditional love an approach which is not accounted for in Baumrind s typology Dr Wendy Grolnick has critiqued Baumrind s use of the term firm control in her description of authoritative parenting and argued that there should be clear differentiation between coercive power assertion which is associated with negative effects on children and the more positive roles of structure and high expectations 78 Catherine C Lewis argued that the empirical research on authoritative parenting did not sufficiently account for the possibility that positive effects associated with parental control emerged from the child s willingness to obey rather than the parent s tendency to exercise control 79 Lewis also argued that the studies did not sufficiently separate the effects of firm control from the effects of other parenting practices that tend to accompany it Therefore it is possible for the child s outcomes to be attributed to those accompanying parenting practices rather than to the measure of firm control Attachment theory editMain article Attachment theory Attachment theory was created by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth 80 This theory focuses on the attachment of parents and children specifically through infancy and the aspect of children staying in close distance with their caregiver who will protect them from the outside world 80 The bond that is created between child and mother is a vital part of how the child will grow up Attachment between a mother and her child can be seen by the child s cry s their smiles and if they cling to their mother babies also turn to these attachment techniques when they feel unsafe scared or confused However when the stress is gone and they know they are safe due to that relationship the infant or child can then engage in activities to strengthen how they explore and view the world around them 81 This theory includes the possible types of attachment Secure attachment is when the child feels comfortable exploring their environment when their caregiver is not there but uses them as a base for comfort and security if they become frightened 82 Insecure attachment is when the child is hesitant to explore the environment on their own and display reluctance in accepting comfort from their parent 80 Attachment theory in adolescence edit Although research on attachment theory has focused on infancy and early childhood research has shown that the relationship between teens and their parents can be affected depending on whether they have a secure or insecure attachment between them 80 A parent s interaction with their child during infancy creates an internal working model of attachment which is the development of expectations that a child has for future relationships and interactions based on the interactions they had during infancy with their caregiver 80 If an adolescent continues to have a secure attachment with their caregiver they are more likely to talk to their guardian about their problems and concerns have stronger interpersonal relationships with friends and significant others and also have higher self esteem 80 Parents continue to maintain a secure attachment through adolescence by expressing understanding good communication skills and allowing their children to safely start doing things independently 82 Other parenting styles edit Attachment parenting edit Attachment parenting is a parenting style framed by psychological attachment theory Attachment in psychology is defined as a lasting emotional bond between people 83 There are four main types of attachment secure insecure resistant and disorganized 84 Resistant attachment relationships are typically going to be characterized by the child s exaggerated expression of getting their needs met through attachment 85 When the infant is in with their caregiver they begin to act hesitant towards exploring their environment and care more about getting attention from the caregiver 85 Disorganized is when the child outwardly shows behaviors that are odd or ambivalent towards the parent i e when the child runs up to their parent and then immediately pulls away and turns around to run away curling up in a ball or even hitting the parent 86 Child centered parenting edit Child centered parenting is a parenting style advocated by Blythe and David Daniel which focuses on the real needs and the unique person hood of each child 87 Research has shown that child centered parenting is difficult to get right 88 Positive parenting edit Positive parenting is a parenting style which generally overlaps with authoritative parenting and is defined by consistent support and guidance throughout developmental stages 89 Concerted Cultivation is a specific form of positive parenting characterized by parents attempts to foster their child s talents through organized extracurricular activities such as music lessons sports athletics and academic enrichment 90 Narcissistic parenting edit A narcissistic parent is a parent affected by narcissism or narcissistic personality disorder Typically narcissistic parents are exclusively and possessively close to their children and may be especially envious of and threatened by their child s growing independence 91 The result may be what has been termed a pattern of narcissistic attachment with the child considered to exist solely for the parent s benefit 92 Parents who are narcissistic in their parenting will be involved in some if not all of these traits self importance no respect for boundaries communication as warfare gaslighting playing the victim abusive behavior neglect 93 Nurturant parenting edit Nurturant parenting is defined by characteristics of being responsive and empathetic It is a family model where children are expected to explore their surroundings with protection from their parents 94 This style of parenting is encouraging and helps offer development opportunities for a child and their temperaments A child s self image social skills and academic performance will improve impacting how they will grow up to be mature happy well balanced adults 95 It has been found that when families have low levels of nurturant involved parenting the youth are more likely to get involved with illegal substances and underage drinking This is an example of how powerful parenting styles are and the impact it has on children Nurturant parenting is a warm and supportive environment for the children and there is a lack of hostility and rejection from the parents toward their kids 96 Overparenting edit Overparenting is parents who try to involve themselves in every aspect of their child s life often attempting to solve all their problems and stifling the child s ability to act independently or solve his or her own problems 97 A helicopter parent is a colloquial early 21st century term for a parent who pays extremely close attention to his or her children s experiences and problems and attempts to sweep all obstacles out of their paths particularly at educational institutions Overparenting limits a child s autonomy and essential development for independence Helicopter parents are so named because they hover overhead like a helicopter especially from late adolescence to early adulthood during which time developing independence and self sufficiency is critical to future success 98 Modern communication technology has facilitated this style allowing parents to monitor their children through cell phones email and online monitoring of academic performance 99 Affectionless control edit The affectionless control parental style combines a lack of warmth and caring low parental care with over control such as parental criticism and intrusiveness This has been linked to children s anxiety 100 and to dysfunctional attitudes and low self esteem in the children 101 although it is not necessarily the cause 100 There is evidence that parental affectionless control is associated with suicidal behavior 102 Slow parenting edit Slow parenting encourages parents to plan and organize less for their children instead allowing them to enjoy their childhood and explore the world at their own pace Electronics are limited simplistic toys are utilized and the child is allowed to develop their own interests and to grow into their own person with much family time allowing children to make their own decisions 103 Idle parenting is a specific form of slow parenting according to which children can take care of themselves most of the time and the parents would be happier if they spent more time taking care of themselves too Toxic parenting edit Toxic parenting is poor parenting with a toxic relationship between the parent and child It results in complete disruption of the child s ability to identify themselves and reduced self esteem neglecting the needs of the child Abuse is sometimes seen in this parenting style 104 Adults who had toxic parents are mostly unable to recognize toxic parenting behavior in themselves Children with toxic and or abusive parents often grow up with psychological and behavioral damage 105 Some of the behaviors of toxic parenting include talking over their child being in a cycle of negative thinking being overly critical towards their children and using guilt to control their child 106 Pathogenic parenting edit Pathogenic parenting refers to parenting style practices that are so aberrant and distorted that they produce significant psychopathology in the child This may lead to child psychological abuse DSM 5 V995 51 It is generally used in the context of distortions to the child s attachment system since the attachment system does not spontaneously or independently dysfunctional 107 Dolphin parenting edit Dolphin parenting is a term used by psychiatrist Shimi Kang and happiness researcher Shawn Achor to represent a parenting style seen as similar to the nature of dolphins being playful social and intelligent 108 109 It has been contrasted to tiger parenting 108 According to Kang dolphin parenting provides a balance between the strict approach of tiger parenting and the lack of rules and expectations that characterizes what she calls jellyfish parents 110 Dolphin parents avoid overscheduling activities for their children refrain from being overprotective and take into account the desires and goals of their children when setting expectations for behavior and academic success 111 Ethnic minority parenting style edit Ethnic Minority parenting style is an ethnocentric term coined in the USA out of Authoritarian parenting and it refers to a style characterized by exceptionally high academic achievements among children from Asian backgrounds Ethnic Minority style differs from strict authoritarian parenting by being highly responsive towards children s needs while also differing from authoritative parenting by maintaining high demands and not placing children s needs as a priority This style promotes high demandingness and high responsiveness together to produce high academic performance in children 112 Alloparenting parenting style edit Alloparenting is the practice of co parenting a child by biological parents and members of the extended family or community This type of parenting is most prevalent in Central African countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic especially in Akka foraging communities 113 Alloparenting is considered to help alleviate parental burdens by utilizing the community and allowing biological parents more time to work or participate in social events 114 Some historians such as Stephanie Coontz suggest that alloparenting as a parenting style helps children to understand love and trust through a widened perspective due to increased bonds formed between child and adult 115 Unconditional parenting edit The unconditional parenting style is one where parents provide their children with love and support no matter what the situation 116 This type of parenting does not involve rewards or punishments but instead focuses on building a strong relationship with your child It can be beneficial as it provides a sense of security for children Commando Parenting is another style where parents essentially do whatever it takes to raise children in their desired way 117 Gentle Parenting edit In The Gentle Parenting Book Sarah Ockwell Smith describes the discipline of gentle parenting as being responsive to children s needs and recogniz ing that all children are individuals 118 With the help of sensitivity respect and understanding as well as the establishment of sound limits gentle parenting aims to raise children who are self assured autonomous and content This method of parenting places a strong emphasis on age appropriate growth Traditional parenting methods emphasize rewards and discipline You reward your kid with enjoyable activities treats and encouraging words when they behave well or do something nice Instead of concentrating on punishment and incentive gentle parenting focuses on improving a child s self awareness and understanding of their own conduct Gentle parenting emphasizes how the parent s feelings are impacted by the child s behavior This instills in them the same teachings about repercussions as conventional parenting methods but with an emphasis on emotion The child is observing the parent s reactions and learning how those actions make the parent feel One of the greatest worries about gentle parenting is that the parent might come off as more of a companion than a parent 119 Parenting Neurodivergent Children edit Baumrind recommends implementing an accountable parenting approach Research findings indicate that ADHD children are more negative and are often outspoken and dictatorial and show fewer inclinations to fixing issues Researchers findings showed that ADHD parents are less lenient but more strict in their parenting styles Parents of children with ADHD and other parents share a comparable authoritative parenting approach Gender has no bearing on parenting style but parents of ADHD kids with greater schooling tend to be more permissive and authoritarian Additionally parents of children with ADHD who had lesser levels of schooling were more lax than parents of kids without ADHD 120 These results suggest that families of children and teenagers with ADHD experience less family support and more behavioral and relational disturbances When a parent adopts an autocratic parenting style they are demanding but unresponsive High standards and adherence to parental guidelines and directives define this parenting approach Verbal conversation lacks emotional depth and is one sided When issuing orders authoritarian parents frequently do not offer justification These children are consequently lonely depressed susceptible and wary Additionally in our research parents of children with ADHD were less lax which indicates that these parents have high expectations for their kids and exercise greater control over them All of these things may be contributing factors to the signs of ADHD in kids and teenagers getting worse 121 Dysfunctional styles editSee also Dysfunctional family and Adverse childhood experiences Unhealthy parenting signs which could lead to a family becoming dysfunctional include 122 Unrealistic expectations Ridicule 123 Conditional love 123 Disrespect 123 especially contempt Emotional intolerance family members not allowed to express the wrong emotions 123 Social dysfunction or isolation 123 for example parents unwilling to reach out to other families especially those with children of the same gender and approximate age or do nothing to help their friendless child Stifled speech children not allowed to dissent or question authority 123 Denial of an inner life children are not allowed to develop their own value systems 123 Being under or over protective Apathy I don t care Belittling You can t do anything right Shame Shame on you Bitterness regardless of what is said using a bitter tone of voice Hypocrisy Do as I say not as I do Lack of forgiveness for minor misdeeds or accidents Judgmental statements or demonization You are a liar Being overly critical and withholding proper praise experts say 80 90 praise and 10 20 constructive criticism is the most healthy 124 125 Double standards or giving mixed messages by having a dual system of values i e one set for the outside world another when in private or teaching divergent values to each child The absentee parent seldom available for their child due to work overload alcohol drug abuse gambling or other addictions Unfulfilled projects activities and promises affecting children We ll do it later Giving to one child what rightly belongs to another Gender prejudice treats one gender of children fairly the other unfairly Discussion and exposure to sexuality either too much too soon or too little too late Faulty discipline based more on emotions or family politics than on established rules e g punishment by surprise Having an unpredictable emotional state due to substance abuse personality disorder s or stress Parents always or never take their children s side when others report acts of misbehavior or teachers report problems at school Scapegoating knowingly or recklessly blaming one child for the misdeeds of another Tunnel vision diagnosis of children s problems for example a parent may think their child is either lazy or has learning disabilities after he falls behind in school despite recent absence due to illness Older siblings given either no or excessive authority over younger siblings with respect to their age difference and level of maturity Frequent withholding of consent blessing for culturally common lawful and age appropriate activities a child wants to take part in The know it all has no need to obtain child s side of the story when accusing or listen to child s opinions on matters which greatly impact them Regularly forcing children to attend activities for which they are extremely over or under qualified e g using a preschool to babysit a typical nine year old boy taking a young child to poker games etc Either being a miser scrooge in totality or selectively allowing children s needs to go unmet e g a father will not buy a bicycle for his son because he wants to save money for retirement or something important Disagreements about nature and nurture parents often non biological blame common problems on child s heredity when faulty parenting may be the actual cause Children as pawns edit One common dysfunctional parental behavior is a parent s manipulation of a child in order to achieve some outcome adverse to the other parent s rights or interests Examples include verbal manipulation such as spreading gossip about the other parent communicating with the parent through the child and in the process exposing the child to the risks of the other parent s displeasure with that communication rather than doing so directly trying to obtain information through the child spying or causing the child to dislike the other parent with insufficient or no concern for the damaging effects of the parent s behavior on the child While many instances of such manipulation occur in shared custody situations that have resulted from separation or divorce it can also take place in intact families where it is known as triangulation citation needed List of other dysfunctional styles edit Using destructively narcissistic parents who rule by fear and conditional love Abusing parents who use physical violence or emotionally or sexually abuse their children Perfectionist fixating on order prestige power or perfect appearances while preventing their child from failing at anything Dogmatic or cult like harsh and inflexible discipline with children not allowed within reason to dissent question authority or develop their own value system Inequitable parenting going to extremes for one child while continually ignoring the needs of another Deprivation control or neglect by withholding love support necessities sympathy praise attention encouragement supervision or otherwise putting their children s well being at risk Abuse among siblings parents fail to intervene when a sibling physically or sexually abuses another sibling Abandonment a parent who willfully separates from their children not wishing any further contact and in some cases without locating alternative long term parenting arrangements leaving them as orphans Appeasement parents who reward bad behavior even by their own standards and inevitably punish another child s good behavior in order to maintain the peace and avoid temper tantrums Peace at any price Loyalty manipulation giving unearned rewards and lavish attention trying to ensure a favored yet rebellious child will be the one most loyal and well behaved while subtly ignoring the wants and needs of their most loyal child currently Helicopter parenting parents who micro manage their children s lives or relationships among siblings especially minor conflicts The deceivers well regarded parents in the community likely to be involved in some charitable non profit works who abuse or mistreat one or more of their children Public image manager sometimes related to above children warned to not disclose what fights abuse or damage happens at home or face severe punishment Don t tell anyone what goes on in this family The paranoid parent a parent having persistent and irrational fear accompanied by anger and false accusations that their child is up to no good or others are plotting harm No friends allowed parents discourage prohibit or interfere with their child from making friends of the same age and gender Role reversal parents who expect their minor children to take care of them instead Not your business children continuously told that a particular brother or sister who is often causing problems is none of their concern Ultra egalitarianism either a much younger child is permitted to do whatever an older child may or an older child must wait years until a younger child is mature enough The guard dog a parent who blindly attacks family members perceived as causing the slightest upset to their esteemed spouse partner or child My baby forever a parent who will not allow one or more of their young children to grow up and begin taking care of themselves The cheerleader one parent cheers on the other parent who is simultaneously abusing their child Along for the ride a reluctant de facto step foster or adoptive parent who does not truly care about their non biological child but must co exist in the same home for the sake of their spouse or partner See also Cinderella effect The politician a parent who repeatedly makes or agrees to children s promises while having little to no intention of keeping them It s taboo parents rebuff any questions children may have about sexuality pregnancy romance puberty certain areas of human anatomy nudity etc Identified patient one child usually selected by the mother who is forced into going to therapy while the family s overall dysfunction is kept hidden Munchausen syndrome by proxy a much more extreme situation than above where the child is intentionally made ill by a parent seeking attention from physicians and other professionals Cross cultural variation editMany of these theories of parenting styles are almost entirely based on evidence from high income countries especially the USA However there are many fundamental differences in child development between high and low income countries due to differences in parenting styles and practices 126 For instance in sub Saharan Africa children are likely to have more than one main caregiver to acquire language in a bilingual environment and to play in mixed aged peer groups 127 However when comparing African American caregiving among lower middle and upper socioeconomic families the number of non parental caregivers decreases as economic resources increase 128 In addition international studies have found Chinese parents to be more concerned with impulse control which may explain the greater use of authoritarian style as compared to U S parents 129 130 Thus social values and norms within a culture influence the choice of parenting style that will help the child conform to cultural expectations 130 There is evidence to suggest cultural differences in the way children respond to parenting practices 131 132 In particular there is ongoing debate surrounding physical discipline and corporal punishment of children 131 133 134 with some authors suggesting it is less harmful in ethnic groups or countries where it is culturally normative 135 such as several low income countries where the prevalence rate remains high 136 Lansford et al 2004 reported harsh parenting was associated with more externalising behaviours in European American compared with African American adolescents 137 Resolving these issues is important in assessing the transferability of parenting interventions across cultures and from high to low income countries in order to improve child development and health outcomes 138 Some parenting styles correlate with positive outcomes across cultures while other parenting styles correlate with outcomes that are specific to one culture For example authoritative parenting is related to positive self esteem and academic outcomes for both Chinese and European American adolescents but the positive effects of the ethnic minority parenting style are specific to Chinese adolescents 129 There is also evidence to suggest that there is not only cultural variation but variations across settings within a culture 139 For example Mexican American and African American parental expectations of obedience and autonomy differ in school and other social settings vs home 139 A study comparing Indian parents who stayed in India and Indian parents who immigrated to a different country shows that the influence cultural traditions have on parenting changes according to social geographical context concluding that immigrant parents place greater emphasis on traditional Indian culture in order to preserve traditional practices in their new country 140 Thus in immigrant families parenting styles according to culture may be the result of conscious reinforcement as opposed to unconscious tradition 140 Differences for male and female children editParents tend to adopt different parenting behaviors based on the sex of their child 141 Fathers more so than mothers Studies have shown that fathers are more emotionally and mentally reactive with their daughters 142 This may cause fathers to have a different parental style between their daughters and sons For example fathers tend to be more strict with their daughters but tend to be more lenient with their sons overall However studies have shown mothers don t see a difference emotionally or mentally for their daughters and or sons 142 Mothers tend to have the same parenting style no matter what the gender of their child is Differential parenting editDifferential parenting is when siblings individually receive different parenting styles or behavior from their parents 52 This most often occurs in families where the children are adolescents and is highly related as to how each child interprets their parent s behavior 52 Research shows that children who view their parents as authoritative generally tend to be happier and functioning at a higher level in a variety of areas 52 When analyzing the level of differentiation within a family it is important to look at the difference in the level of responsiveness including specific characteristics of warmth sensitivity and positivity control leniency and negativity that are directed at each individual child 143 Differential parenting often leads to a non shared environment which is when siblings have different experiences growing up in the same household and different personal outcomes based on their environment 144 In most families with more than one child parents will adjust their parenting styles according to what their child best responds to however a high level of differential parenting can have negative effects on children 143 The effects that differential parenting has on families differs but in general there are usually negative effects on both children 143 The severity of effects is more extreme for the child who is viewed as disfavored 143 The disfavored child generally has a variety of personal development issues such as low self esteem and depression 143 The favored child tends to have higher self esteem and more friends in school 143 However studies show that both favored and disfavored children tend to have problems with interpersonal relationships as well as problems with managing their emotions 143 A high level of differential parenting also influences how siblings treat one another and the level of conflict in the sibling relationship 143 Research shows that this is due in part to children imitating their parents behaviors 143 One theory being discussed in relation to differential parenting is social comparison 145 Social comparison is the outcome of adolescents comparing the treatment they receive from their guardians versus the treatment their siblings receive While these comparisons on treatment may be subconscious it is vital to a child s formation of self worth and their perceived role within the family dynamic 146 As the years go on and adolescents grow and mature their perception of differential parenting within their household becomes prominent and plays a role in forming one s own identity If the adolescent views inequitable treatment intentional or not on behalf of the guardian s report have shown internalized symptoms of depression anxiety etc and external outburst such as risk taking and delinquency to non verbally communicate to a guardian unfair treatment 146 Parental differential treatment is seen by researchers as arguably a subjective phenomenon because it is based on perception 146 Much research has still yet to be completed on this subject but based on what is known can be attributed to the social comparison arising from differential parenting See also editDysfunctional family Neglect Resources for Infant Education RIE Hong Kong children Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother Reflective ParentingCitations edit a b c Spera Christopher 1 June 2005 A Review of the Relationship Among Parenting Practices Parenting Styles and Adolescent School Achievement Educational Psychology Review 17 2 125 146 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 596 237 doi 10 1007 s10648 005 3950 1 S2CID 11050947 Davey Graham ed 30 June 2006 Parenting Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Psychology Routledge ISBN 9780340812389 Berger S Kathleen 18 February 2011 The Developing Person Through the Life Span 8th ed Worth Publishers pp 273 278 ISBN 978 1 4292 3203 6 Firestone Lisa 30 July 2015 7 Ways Your Childhood Affects How You ll Parent Psychology Today a b Bornstein M H Zlotnik D 2008 Parenting Styles and their Effects Encyclopedia of Infant and Early Childhood Development pp 496 509 doi 10 1016 B978 012370877 9 00118 3 ISBN 978 0 12 370877 9 Baumrind Diana 1966 Effects of Authoritative Parental Control on Child Behavior Child Development 37 4 887 907 doi 10 2307 1126611 JSTOR 1126611 a b c Smetana Judith G June 2017 Current research on parenting styles dimensions and beliefs Current Opinion in Psychology 15 19 25 doi 10 1016 j copsyc 2017 02 012 PMID 28813261 Skinner Ellen Johnson Sandy Snyder Tatiana May 2005 Six Dimensions of Parenting A Motivational Model Parenting 5 2 175 235 doi 10 1207 s15327922par0502 3 S2CID 46064817 Baldwin Alfred L 1948 Socialization and the Parent Child Relationship Child Development 19 3 127 136 doi 10 2307 1125710 JSTOR 1125710 Biglan Anthony Flay Brian R Embry Dennis D Sandler Irwin N 2012 The critical role of nurturing environments for promoting human well being American Psychologist 67 4 257 271 doi 10 1037 a0026796 PMC 3621015 PMID 22583340 Steinberg Laurence Lamborn Susie D Dornbusch Sanford M Darling Nancy October 1992 Impact of Parenting Practices on Adolescent Achievement Authoritative Parenting School Involvement and Encouragement to Succeed Child Development 63 5 1266 1281 doi 10 2307 1131532 JSTOR 1131532 PMID 1446552 Amato Paul R February 1988 Family processes and the competence of adolescents and primary school children Journal of Youth and Adolescence 18 1 39 53 doi 10 1007 bf02139245 PMID 24271603 S2CID 35288922 Kurdek Lawrence A Fine Mark A August 1994 Family Acceptance and Family Control as Predictors of Adjustment in Young Adolescents Linear Curvilinear or Interactive Effects Child Development 65 4 1137 1146 doi 10 2307 1131310 JSTOR 1131310 PMID 7956470 Gray Marjory Roberts Steinberg Laurence August 1999 Unpacking Authoritative Parenting Reassessing a Multidimensional Construct Journal of Marriage and the Family 61 3 574 doi 10 2307 353561 JSTOR 353561 Amato Paul R Fowler Frieda August 2002 Parenting Practices Child Adjustment and Family Diversity Journal of Marriage and Family 64 3 703 716 doi 10 1111 j 1741 3737 2002 00703 x S2CID 143550911 Rousseau Jean Jacques 1762 Emile ou De l education Amsterdam J Neaulme Irvine Paul 2014 Rousseau Jean J 1712 1778 Encyclopedia of Special Education doi 10 1002 9781118660584 ese2104 ISBN 978 0 470 64216 0 White F Hayes B amp Livesey D 2005 Developmental Psychology From Infancy to Adulthood New South Wales Pearson Education Australia Babakr Zana H Mohamedamin Pakstan Kakamad Karwan 2019 Piaget s Cognitive Developmental Theory Critical Review Education Quarterly Reviews 2 3 517 524 doi 10 31014 aior 1993 02 03 84 S2CID 264860064 ERIC EJ1274368 Erikson Erik 1968 Identity Youth and Crisis W W Norton amp Company pp 15 19 ISBN 0393311449 Constantinople Anne July 1969 An Eriksonian measure of personality development in college students Developmental Psychology 1 4 357 372 doi 10 1037 h0027706 Sheehy Noel Chapman Antony J Conroy Wenday A eds 2016 Erikson Erik Homburger Biographical Dictionary of Psychology p 170 doi 10 4324 9780203827086 ISBN 978 1 136 79885 6 Wright Benjamin Winter 1957 Psychology in the Classroom by Rudolf Dreikurs The School Review 65 4 490 492 doi 10 1086 442418 Goddard H Wallace Dennis Steven A 2003 Parenting Education In James J Ponzetti Jr ed International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family Gale Farmington USA Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 Retrieved 13 October 2014 Roeckelein J E ed 2006 Developmental Theory Elsevier s Dictionary of Psychological Theories Elsevier pp 159 162 ISBN 978 0 08 046064 2 Furedi Frank 2001 Paranoid Parenting Why Ignoring the Experts May Be Best for Your Child Allen Lane p 240 ISBN 978 0 7139 9488 9 Petersen Steve January 10 2000 Baby Steps Archived from the original on December 31 2009 Retrieved December 6 2009 Gill Tim 2007 No fear Growing up in a Risk Averse Society PDF Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation p 81 ISBN 978 1 903080 08 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 06 Gill Tim 2007 Playing it too safe RSA Journal 154 5528 46 51 JSTOR 41379798 Gerstel Naomi Mar 1999 The Nurture Assumption Why Children Turn Out the Way they Do by Judith Rich Harris Contemporary Sociology 28 2 174 176 doi 10 2307 2654856 JSTOR 2654856 PMC 1127334 PMID 10807640 Smith P Group socialization theory Reader s guide to the social sciences Perkins Marian May 13 2000 The Nurture Assumption Why Children Turn Out The Way They Do by Judith Rich Harris British Medical Journal 320 7245 1347 doi 10 1136 bmj 320 7245 1347 PMC 1127334 PMID 10807640 A position not actually taken by the author but apparently it was feared that lay readers would still interpret the book in this way as in Will it free some to mistreat their kids since it doesn t matter with this fear being attributed to psychologist Frank Farley of Temple University president of the APA division that honored Harris by Begley Sharon 1998 09 29 The Parent Trap Newsweek Wright Amanda J Jackson Joshua J 6 January 2023 Is parent personality associated with adolescent outcomes for their child A response surface analysis approach Infant and Child Development doi 10 1002 icd 2395 Paine Amy L Perra Oliver Anthony Rebecca Shelton Katherine H August 2021 Charting the trajectories of adopted children s emotional and behavioral problems The impact of early adversity and postadoptive parental warmth Development and Psychopathology 33 3 922 936 doi 10 1017 S0954579420000231 PMC 8374623 PMID 32366341 Reuben Julia D Shaw Daniel S Neiderhiser Jenae M Natsuaki Misaki N Reiss David Leve Leslie D August 2016 Warm Parenting and Effortful Control in Toddlerhood Independent and Interactive Predictors of School Age Externalizing Behavior Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 44 6 1083 1096 doi 10 1007 s10802 015 0096 6 PMC 5097859 PMID 26496906 Baumrind D February 1967 Child care practices anteceding three patterns of preschool behavior Genetic Psychology Monographs 75 1 43 88 PMID 6032134 Baumrind Diana March 1978 Parental Disciplinary Patterns and Social Competence in Children Youth amp Society 9 3 239 267 doi 10 1177 0044118x7800900302 S2CID 140984313 Arnett Jeffrey 2013 Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood A Cultural Approach United States of America Pearson Education p 182 ISBN 9780205892495 Slater A Bremner J G 2017 An Introduction to Developmental Psychology Wiley p 592 ISBN 978 1 118 76720 7 Archived from the original on 8 April 2019 Retrieved 21 September 2017 Darling Nancy Steinberg Laurence 2017 Parenting Style as Context An Integrative Model Interpersonal Development pp 161 170 doi 10 4324 9781351153683 8 ISBN 978 1 351 15368 3 Arnett Jeffrey 2013 Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood A Cultural Approach United States Of America Pearson p 182 ISBN 978 0 205 89249 5 Maccoby E E Martin J A 1983 Socialization in the context of the family Parent child interaction In Mussen P H Hetherington E M eds Manual of child psychology Vol 4 Social development New York John Wiley and Sons pp 1 101 a b c d e f g h Santrock J W 2007 A topical approach to life span development third Ed New York McGraw Hill page needed Parenting Style and Its Correlates Archived 2009 04 23 at the Wayback Machine athealth com Retrieved 2009 06 14 Become a Positive Parent 5 Types of Parenting Styles LifeGuideBlog 2019 10 03 Retrieved 2019 10 04 Turner Erlanger A Chandler Megan Heffer Robert W May 2009 The Influence of Parenting Styles Achievement Motivation and Self Efficacy on Academic Performance in College Students Journal of College Student Development 50 3 337 346 doi 10 1353 csd 0 0073 S2CID 14083139 Encyclopedia Parenting Retrieved 2022 01 21 Strassen Berger Kathleen 2011 The Developing Person Through the Life Span Worth Publishers p 273 All about the authoritative parenting style Pagewise Archived from the original on 2007 06 30 Retrieved 2007 09 23 a b Parenting Styles full citation needed a b c d e f Arnett Jeffrey 2013 Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood A Cultural Approach United States Of America Pearson pp 182 188 ISBN 978 0 205 89249 5 Stassen Berger Kathleen 2011 The Developing Person Through the Life Span Worth Publishing pp 273 274 Shaw Zoey A Starr Lisa R December 2019 Intergenerational Transmission of Emotion Dysregulation The Role of Authoritarian Parenting Style and Family Chronic Stress Journal of Child and Family Studies 28 12 3508 3518 doi 10 1007 s10826 019 01534 1 S2CID 203481307 Moore Shirley G 1992 The Role of Parents in the Development of Peer Group Competence Report ERIC ED346992 a b c d Stassen Berger Kathleen 2011 The Developing Person Through the Lifespan Worth Publishers p 274 Chao Ruth K 1994 Beyond Parental Control and Authoritarian Parenting Style Understanding Chinese Parenting through the Cultural Notion of Training Child Development 65 4 1111 1119 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8624 1994 tb00806 x PMID 7956468 S2CID 45541038 What s Your Parenting Style Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine Parents The Anti Drug National Youth Anti Drug Media Campaign Retrieved 2009 06 14 Ronsch Hendrik 2020 Effectiveness of laws and policies governing permissive parenting in pursuit of the reduction of severe child abuse in Germany Children and Youth Services Review 119 105510 doi 10 1016 j childyouth 2020 105510 S2CID 226315069 Masud Hamid Ahmad Muhammad Shakil Cho Ki Woong Fakhr Zainab August 2019 Parenting Styles and Aggression Among Young Adolescents A Systematic Review of Literature PDF Community Mental Health Journal 55 6 1015 1030 doi 10 1007 s10597 019 00400 0 PMID 31102163 S2CID 156055591 a b c Rosenthal Maryann Knowing Yourself and Your Children www drma com Archived from the original on 24 August 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2014 Dornbusch Sanford Ritter Philip Leiderman P Robert Donald Fraleigh Michael 1987 The Relation of Parenting Style to Adolescent School Performance Child Development 58 5 1244 1257 doi 10 2307 1130618 JSTOR 1130618 PMID 3665643 S2CID 8123752 Becona Elisardo Martinez Ursula Calafat Amador March 2013 Parental permissiveness control and affect and drug use among adolescents Psicothema 25 3 292 298 doi 10 7334 psicothema2012 294 PMID 23910741 ProQuest 2778325105 Parenting www kingdomsolutions us Retrieved 2019 12 06 dead link a b Verzello Amanda 2018 07 20 Teens and alcohol study Parenting style can prevent binge drinking News Brigham Young University Archived from the original on 20 December 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2014 Deater Deckard Kirby 2013 The Social Environment and the Development of Psychopathology In Zelazo Philip David ed The Oxford Handbook of Developmental Psychology Vol 2 Self and Other pp 527 548 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199958474 013 0021 ISBN 978 0 19 995847 4 Arora Monika Nov 2014 The Impact of Authoritative amp Neglectful Parenting Style on Educational Performance of Learners at High School Level PDF International Journals of Multidisciplinary Research 3 2 Dhaliwal Ritika 21 September 2018 Parental neglect and its effect White Swan Foundation Retrieved 2022 05 05 Chan T W Koo A June 2011 Parenting Style and Youth Outcomes in the UK European Sociological Review 27 3 385 399 doi 10 1093 esr jcq013 Darling Nancy March 1999 Parenting Style and Its Correlates Report ERIC ED427896 Musitu G Garcia F 2004 Consequences of the family socialization in the Spanish culture Psicothema 16 2 288 293 Archived from the original on 2016 10 03 Rodrigues Yara Veiga Feliciano Fuentes Maria C Garcia Fernando 11 March 2013 Parenting and Adolescents Self esteem The Portuguese Context Revista de Psicodidactica 18 2 395 416 doi 10 1387 RevPsicodidact 6842 Martinez Isabel Garcia Jose Fernando Yubero Santiago June 2007 Parenting Styles and Adolescents Self Esteem in Brazil Psychological Reports 100 3 731 745 doi 10 2466 pr0 100 3 731 745 hdl 10578 1956 PMID 17688087 S2CID 21462532 Oliva Alfredo 12 January 2006 Relaciones familiares y desarrollo adolescente Anuario de Psicologia The UB Journal of Psychology 209 224 hdl 11441 67352 ProQuest 2681622081 Osorio Alfonso Gonzalez Camara Marta November 2016 Testing the alleged superiority of the indulgent parenting style among Spanish adolescents Psicothema 28 4 414 420 doi 10 7334 psicothema2015 314 PMID 27776610 Gonzalez Camara Marta Osorio Alfonso Reparaz Charo 2019 Measurement and Function of the Control Dimension in Parenting Styles A Systematic Review International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16 17 3157 doi 10 3390 ijerph16173157 PMC 6747547 PMID 31470633 Kohn Alfie 2006 Unconditional Parenting Moving from Rewards and Punishments to Love and Reason Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7434 8748 1 page needed Grolnick Wendy S 2012 The Relations among Parental Power Assertion Control and Structure Commentary on Baumrind Human Development 55 2 57 64 doi 10 1159 000338533 JSTOR 26764606 S2CID 144535005 Lewis Catherine C November 1981 The effects of parental firm control A reinterpretation of findings Psychological Bulletin 90 3 547 563 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 90 3 547 a b c d e f Arnett Jeffrey Jensen 2013 Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood A Cultural Approach United States of America Pearson Education pp 188 190 ISBN 9780205892495 Moretti Marlene 2004 Adolescent parent attachment Bonds that support healthy development Paediatrics amp Child Health 9 8 Oxford University Press 551 555 doi 10 1093 pch 9 8 551 PMC 2724162 PMID 19680483 a b Bretherton Inge September 1992 The origins of attachment theory John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth Developmental Psychology 28 5 759 775 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 28 5 759 Stassen Berger Kathleen 2011 The Developing Person Through the Life Span p 194 Stassen Berger Kathleen 2011 The Developing Person Through the Life Span p 196 a b AboutKidsHealth www aboutkidshealth ca Retrieved 2022 06 26 Disorganized Attachment How Disorganized Attachments Form amp How They Can Be Healed PsychAlive 2013 06 11 Retrieved 2022 06 27 wethechildrenfoundation com Mascolo The Failure of Child Centered Parenting Psychology Today Retrieved 20 July 2020 Walton Stephen The Positive parenting centre www the positive parenting centre com Archived from the original on 10 December 2014 Retrieved 10 December 2014 Cheadle Jacob E Jan 2008 Educational Investment Family Context and Children s Math and Reading Growth from Kindergarten through the Third Grade Sociology of Education 81 1 1 31 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 451 9878 doi 10 1177 003804070808100101 JSTOR 20452721 S2CID 34912567 Stephen E Levich Clone Being 2004 p 31 and p 89 91 David Stafford amp Liz Hodgkinson Codependency London 1995 p 41 Quirke Michael G Marriage Licensed Therapist Family 2021 06 21 Traits of Children with Narcissistic Parents Michael G Quirke MFT Retrieved 2022 06 27 Oyserman Daphna Radin Norma Saltz Eli 1 June 1994 Predictors of nurturant parenting in teen mothers living in three generational families Child Psychiatry and Human Development 24 4 215 230 doi 10 1007 BF02353198 hdl 2027 42 43953 PMID 8082418 S2CID 470045 Singhal Kushal 2019 03 03 Nurturant Parenting Characteristics amp Impact on Kids Cafewhiz Cafe whiz Retrieved 2019 12 10 Weymouth Bridget Fosco Gregory Feinberg Mark 2017 Nurturant Involved Parenting and Adolescent Substance Use Examining an Internalizing Pathway through Adolescent Social Anxiety Symptoms and Substance Refusal Efficacy Development and Psychopathology 31 1 PubMed Central 247 260 doi 10 1017 S0954579417001766 PMC 5991983 PMID 29212564 Winner Nathan A Nicholson Bonnie C November 2018 Overparenting and Narcissism in Young Adults The Mediating Role of Psychological Control Journal of Child and Family Studies 27 11 3650 3657 doi 10 1007 s10826 018 1176 3 S2CID 150247085 Jackson L J November 2010 Smothering Mothering Helicopter parents are landing big in child care cases ABA Journal 96 11 18 19 JSTOR 20789779 Gordon Larry Kim Victoria 24 January 2008 Hovering Parents No Big Deal for Freshmen Los Angeles Times p B1 a b Paul C McCabe Steven R Shaw 23 February 2010 Psychiatric Disorders Current Topics and Interventions for Educators Corwin Press p 31 ISBN 978 1 4129 6876 8 Archived from the original on 8 April 2019 Retrieved 24 September 2017 Paul R Robbins 24 October 2008 Understanding Depression 2nd ed McFarland p 81 ISBN 978 0 7864 5263 7 Archived from the original on 8 April 2019 Retrieved 24 September 2017 Goschin S Briggs J Blanco Lutzen S Cohen LJ Galynker I 2013 Parental affectionless control and suicidality Journal of Affective Disorders Review 151 1 1 6 doi 10 1016 j jad 2013 05 096 PMID 23820097 Belkin Lisa 8 April 2009 What is Slow Parenting Motherlode Blog The New York Times 12 Types of Parenting Styles and Child Discipline Strategies Positive parenting ally com Archived from the original on 2012 04 27 Retrieved 2012 05 02 Al Odhayani Abdulaziz Watson William J Watson Lindsay August 2013 Behavioural consequences of child abuse Canadian Family Physician 59 8 831 836 PMC 3743691 PMID 23946022 4 Examples of Toxic Parenting and How to Fix Them Foundations An Attachment Based Model of Parental Alienation C A Childress 2015 page needed a b Berl Rachel Pomerance August 1 2013 Dolphin Parenting Raising Kids to Be Smart and Happy U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Retrieved October 27 2015 Kang Shimi 2014 The Dolphin Way A Parent s Guide to Raising Healthy Happy and Motivated Kids Without Turning into a Tiger New York Jeremy P Tarcher Inc ISBN 978 0 399 16604 4 Kang Shimi 2014 09 09 What s a Dolphin Parent Psychiatrist Decodes Parenting Styles Parenting com Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Retrieved October 27 2015 Kang Shimi May 11 2014 A Case for Parenting the Dolphin Not Tiger Mom Way Time Archived from the original on October 14 2015 Retrieved October 27 2015 Huang Grace H C Gove Mary 1 March 2015 Asian Parenting Styles and Academic Achievement Views from Eastern and Western Perspectives Education 135 3 389 397 Gale A406162572 Meehan Courtney L March 2005 The effects of residential locality on parental and alloparental investment among the Aka foragers of the central African Republic Human Nature 16 1 58 80 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 585 4382 doi 10 1007 s12110 005 1007 2 PMID 26189516 S2CID 24960799 Hardy Sarah 2016 04 27 Alloparenting and How it Really Does Take a Village to Raise a Child Motherhood in Point of Fact Archived from the original on December 6 2018 Retrieved December 5 2018 Marsh Abigail Edge org website 2017 What Scientific Term or Concept Ought to be More Widely Known Retrieved December 5 2018 Smith Amy AmyandRose com website 2021 16 Parenting Styles Psychology and Impact on Children Retrieved June 3 2022 Is Commando Parenting style good for your child 24 September 2020 What gentle parenting can teach us about care relationships and communication Popular Science 2021 07 28 Retrieved 2023 03 27 What Is Gentle Parenting Cleveland Clinic 2022 08 05 Retrieved 2023 03 27 Firouzkouhi Moghaddam Mahboobeh Assareh Marzeyeh Heidaripoor Amirhossein Eslami Rad Raheleh Pishjoo Masoud 20 December 2013 The Study of Comprising Parenting Style between Children with ADHD and Normal Children Archives of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy 15 4 45 49 doi 10 12740 app 19375 Stefanidi Evropi Schoning Johannes Feger Sebastian S Marshall Paul Rogers Yvonne Niess Jasmin 2022 Designing for Care Ecosystems A Literature Review of Technologies for Children with ADHD Interaction Design and Children pp 13 25 doi 10 1145 3501712 3529746 ISBN 978 1 4503 9197 9 Blair Justice Blair Rita April 1990 The Abusing Family Revised ed Insight Books ISBN 978 0306434419 a b c d e f g Neuharth Dan 1999 If You Had Controlling Parents How to Make Peace with Your Past and Take Your Place in the World Diane Publishing Company ISBN 978 0788193835 Praise encouragement and rewards Raising Children Network 2011 04 10 Archived from the original on 2019 03 28 Chavez Holly 2 January 2016 13 Signs Of A Toxic Parent That Many People Don t Realize Lifehack Chang Mimi 2007 01 01 Cultural differences in parenting styles and their effects on teens self esteem perceived parental relationship satisfaction and self satisfaction thesis thesis Carnegie Mellon University Serpell Robert Marfo Kofi December 2014 Some Growth Points in African Child Development Research Child Development in Africa Views From Inside New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development 2014 146 97 112 doi 10 1002 cad 20075 PMID 25512048 Roopnarine Jaipaul L Fouts Hillary N Lamb Michael E Lewis Elligan Tracey Y September 2005 Mothers and Fathers Behaviors Toward Their 3 to 4 Month Old Infants in Lower Middle and Upper Socioeconomic African American Families Developmental Psychology 41 5 723 732 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 41 5 723 PMID 16173870 a b Li Yan Costanzo Philip R Putallaz Martha 29 October 2010 Maternal Socialization Goals Parenting Styles and Social Emotional Adjustment Among Chinese and European American Young Adults Testing a Mediation Model The Journal of Genetic Psychology 171 4 330 362 doi 10 1080 00221325 2010 505969 PMID 21171548 S2CID 23895038 a b Porter Christian Hart Craig Yang Chongming Robinson Clyde Frost Olsen Susanne Zeng Qing Olsen Joseph Jin Shenghua 2005 A comparative study of child temperament and parenting in Beijing China and the western United States International Journal of Behavioral Development 29 6 541 551 doi 10 1080 01650250500147402 a b Gershoff Elizabeth Thompson 2002 Corporal punishment by parents and associated child behaviors and experiences A meta analytic and theoretical review Psychological Bulletin 128 4 539 579 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 128 4 539 PMID 12081081 S2CID 2393109 Yasui Miwa Dishion Thomas J 25 June 2007 The Ethnic Context of Child and Adolescent Problem Behavior Implications for Child and Family Interventions Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review 10 2 137 179 doi 10 1007 s10567 007 0021 9 PMID 17588150 S2CID 3133120 Norman Rosana E Byambaa Munkhtsetseg De Rumna Butchart Alexander Scott James Vos Theo 27 November 2012 The Long Term Health Consequences of Child Physical Abuse Emotional Abuse and Neglect A Systematic Review and Meta Analysis PLOS Medicine 9 11 e1001349 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 1001349 PMC 3507962 PMID 23209385 Vittrup Brigitte Holden George W May 2010 Children s assessments of corporal punishment and other disciplinary practices The role of age race SES and exposure to spanking Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 31 3 211 220 doi 10 1016 j appdev 2009 11 003 Lansford Jennifer E 2010 The Special Problem of Cultural Differences in Effects of Corporal Punishment Law and Contemporary Problems 73 2 89 106 JSTOR 25766388 Gale A242509166 UNICEF 2010 Child disciplinary practices at home Evidence from a range of Low and Middle Income Countries Report Lansford Jennifer E Deater Deckard Kirby Dodge Kenneth A Bates John E Pettit Gregory S May 2004 Ethnic differences in the link between physical discipline and later adolescent externalizing behaviors Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 45 4 801 812 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7610 2004 00273 x PMC 2772061 PMID 15056311 Gardner Frances Montgomery Paul Knerr Wendy November 2016 Transporting Evidence Based Parenting Programs for Child Problem Behavior Age 3 10 Between Countries Systematic Review and Meta Analysis Journal of Clinical Child amp Adolescent Psychology 45 6 749 762 doi 10 1080 15374416 2015 1015134 PMID 25785902 a b Tamis LeMonda Catherine S Way Niobe Hughes Diane Yoshikawa Hirokazu Kalman Ronit Kahana Niwa Erika Y February 2008 Parents Goals for Children The Dynamic Coexistence of Individualism and Collectivism in Cultures and Individuals Social Development 17 1 183 209 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9507 2007 00419 x a b Sapru Saloni September 2006 Parenting and Adolescent Identity A Study of Indian Families in New Delhi and Geneva Journal of Adolescent Research 21 5 484 513 doi 10 1177 0743558406291766 S2CID 145443797 Putnam Jodi A Judith Walls Myers Love Dee Influence on children s gender development www extension purdue edu Archived from the original on 3 September 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2014 a b Mascaro Jennifer S Rentscher Kelly E Hackett Patrick D Mehl Matthias R Rilling James K June 2017 Child gender influences paternal behavior language and brain function Behavioral Neuroscience 131 3 262 273 doi 10 1037 bne0000199 PMC 5481199 PMID 28541079 a b c d e f g h i Pauker Sharon Perlman Michal Prime Heather Jenkins Jennifer M August 2017 Differential parenting and children s social understanding Social Development 26 3 645 657 doi 10 1111 sode 12214 Rauer Amy J Volling Brenda L December 2007 Differential parenting and sibling jealousy Developmental correlates of young adults romantic relationships Personal Relationships 14 4 495 511 doi 10 1111 j 1475 6811 2007 00168 x PMC 2396512 PMID 19050748 Festinger Leon May 1954 A Theory of Social Comparison Processes Human Relations 7 2 117 140 doi 10 1177 001872675400700202 S2CID 18918768 a b c Rolan Emily Marceau Kristine December 2018 Individual and Sibling Characteristics Parental Differential Treatment and Adolescent Externalizing Behaviors Journal of Youth and Adolescence 47 12 2535 2553 doi 10 1007 s10964 018 0892 8 PMC 6329658 PMID 29992521 References editHong J S 2021 Parenting style and bullying and victimization Comparing foreign born Asian US born Asian and White American adolescents Journal of Family Violence 36 7 799 811 doi 10 1007 s10896 020 00176 y S2CID 220294556 Fatima S 2022 Parenting styles moral identity and prosocial behaviors in adolescents Current Psychology 41 2 902 910 doi 10 1007 s12144 020 00609 3 S2CID 212920276 Younesian S 2021 Maternal interactive beliefs and style as predictors of language development in preterm and full term children Journal of Child Language 48 2 215 243 doi 10 1017 S0305000920000148 PMID 32618520 S2CID 220328655 Sanvictores T Mendez MD 2023 Types of Parenting Styles and Effects on Children StatPearls StatPearls PMID 33760502 dangx111 5 Nov 2011 The Four Types of Parenting Styles Archived from the original on 19 January 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link better source needed Zhang X 2021 Resting heart rate mediates the relationship between parenting style and callous unemotional traits in Chinese children Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology 49 11 1419 1430 doi 10 1007 s10802 021 00834 9 PMID 34128174 S2CID 235438369 Ong M Y 2018 The influence of perceived parenting styles on socio emotional development from pre puberty into puberty European Child amp Adolescent Psychiatry 27 1 37 46 doi 10 1007 s00787 017 1016 9 PMC 5799331 PMID 28631023 Edenroth Cato F 2020 Motherhood and highly sensitive children in an online discussion forum Health An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health Illness and Medicine 24 4 442 458 doi 10 1177 1363459318812003 PMID 30458638 S2CID 53943559 Barnhart C Raval V Jansari A Raval P 2013 Perception of Parenting Style Among College Students in India and the United States Journal of Child Family Stud 22 5 684 693 doi 10 1007 s10826 012 9621 1 S2CID 145393764 Bornstein M Putnick D 2012 Cognitive and Socioemotional Caregiving in Developing Countries Child Development 83 1 46 61 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8624 2011 01673 x PMC 3270892 PMID 22277006 Pomeranz E Wang Q 2009 The Role of Parental Control in Children s Development in Western and East Asia Countries Current Directions in Psychological Science 18 5 285 289 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8721 2009 01653 x S2CID 145272128 Ch 1 Introduction Psychology OpenStax openstax org 8 December 2014 Retrieved 2022 01 22 Further reading editBower Bruce September 2011 Humans Recession alters parenting style Mothers with gene variant became more aggressive Science News 180 7 9 doi 10 1002 scin 5591800706 Robert Feldman PhD at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Child Development Third Edition Morris A S Cui L amp Steinberg L 2013 Parenting research and themes What we have learned and where to go next In R E Larzelere A S Morris amp A W Harrist Eds Authoritative parenting Synthesizing nurturance and discipline for optimal child development pp 35 58 Washington DC American Psychological Association Harris Judith R The Nurture Assumption Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do New York Times 1998 Warash Bobbie Are Middle Class Parents Authoritative with a Touch of Permissiveness Delta Kappa Gamma Bulletin 74 22007 28 31 Chua Amy Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior The Wall Street Journal Estep Hanna M Olson James N December 2011 Parenting style academic dishonesty and infidelity in college students College Student Journal 45 4 830 839 Gale A278276704 Grobman K H 2003 Diana Baumrind s 1966 Prototypical Descriptions of 3 Parenting Styles Retrieved from Diana Baumrind amp Parenting Styles Rinaldi Christina M Howe Nina April 2012 Mothers and fathers parenting styles and associations with toddlers externalizing internalizing and adaptive behaviors PDF Early Childhood Research Quarterly 27 2 266 273 doi 10 1016 j ecresq 2011 08 001 Rivers J Mullis A K Fortner L A Mullis R L 2012 Relationships Between Parenting Styles and the Academic Performance of Adolescents Journal of Family Social Work 15 3 202 216 doi 10 1080 10522158 2012 666644 S2CID 144485738 Schary D P Cardinal B J Loprinzi P D 2012 Parenting style associated with sedentary behaviour in preschool children Early Child Development amp Care 182 8 1015 1026 doi 10 1080 03004430 2012 678596 S2CID 144427759 Williams K Ciarrochi J Heaven P 2012 Inflexible Parents Inflexible Kids A 6 Year Longitudinal Study of Parenting Style and the Development of Psychological Flexibility in Adolescents Journal of Youth and Adolescence 41 8 1053 1066 doi 10 1007 s10964 012 9744 0 PMID 22311519 S2CID 207207009 Spera C 2005 A review of the relationship among parenting practices parenting styles and adolescent school achievement Educational Psychology Review 17 2 125 146 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 596 237 doi 10 1007 s10648 005 3950 1 S2CID 11050947 Attachment Parenting Q amp A with Lysa Parker co chairman of Attachment Parenting International Bundoo com Retrieved from Attachment Parenting Q amp A with Lysa Parker Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parenting styles amp oldid 1218156569 Authoritarian, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.