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Social Development (page 4)

By C.R. Smith
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Direct Training

Direct training, through teaching and discipline, is another way in which parents can influence their children's attitudes and behaviors. Clear expectations offer a consistent family structure that has a stabilizing influence on children's development. Threats of punishment or power plays are less effective than explanations about why certain behaviors are better than others, and positively reinforcing these behaviors.

Baumrind's classic research on child-rearing practices among middle-income parents identified three general patterns: authoritative, authoritarian, and permissive. Authoritative parents were controlling and demanding. They had high demands for obedience, academic achievement, and sharing household tasks. At the same time, they were warm, open to discussion and negotiation with their children about why they didn't want to comply, and responded positively to their children's independent behavior. Authoritarian parents were more punitive and rejecting. They, too, had high standards for behavior, but these were absolute. Power, unaccompanied by reasoning and communication, was used to compel compliance. They valued obedience for its own sake and there was little give-and-take with their children. By contrast, permissive parents were very accepting of all their children's impulses and didn't enforce rules or standards for behavior and achievement.

Authoritative parents tended to produce children who were socially responsible, independent, friendly to peers, cooperative, achievement-oriented, dominant, and purposeful. In contrast, children of authoritarian parents tended to be discontent, withdrawn, and distrustful. Permissive parents raised children who were the least self-reliant, self-controlled, and explorative.

Baumrind identified several parent practices and attitudes that help develop children whose behavior is socially responsible, assertive, cooperative, purposeful. confident, altruistic, creative, cognitively challenging, and independent:

  1. Modeling socially responsible and self-assertive behavior.
  2. Firmly enforcing policies that reward socially responsible behavior and punish deviant behavior, and that are accompanied by explanations consistent with the parents' principles.
  3. Accepting, but not overprotective or passive, parental attitudes; approval is contingent on the child's behavior.
  4. High demands for achievement and conformity with parental policies, accompanied by openness to the child's rationale and encouragement of independent judgment.
  5. Provision of a complex, stimulating environment that offers challenge and excitement as well as security.

Many of Baumrind's authoritative parents' behaviors correlated with greater autonomy in their youngsters: parents being accepting, empathic, supportive, self-aware, curious, appreciative of individual's differences yet building connectedness within the family, and using family discussions to solve problems. Parents who tell children why, not just what, to do help give children a rationale for the future when they face not only a similar situation but also new problems.

Authoritative parenting helps to moderate peer influence in that these children are more strongly influenced by high-achieving friends and less influenced by drug-using friends. These parents directly influence their adolescents' friendships through such means as giving advice on which teenagers to steer clear of, inviting over prosocial friends, and encouraging activities that draw socially appropriate peers. The authoritative parent knows to "pick the battles" carefully, overlooking harping on the child's sloppy dress habits, for example, in favor of promoting the value of studying. These teenagers have lower drug use than do teenagers whose parents use lower levels or too controlling levels of management.

Research shows that overprotective parents tend to delay their children's development. Mothers in the Collaborative Perinatal Project who were overdemonstrative to their 8-month-old infants—frequently fondling and caressing them, using terms of endearment, talking only about their child's good qualities while glossing over or explaining away less desirable behaviors—seven years later more often had children who had learning difficulties or were hyperactive.

A great deal of the child's ability to identify, model and learn from his or her parents depends on the interaction of the child's unique temperament with that of family members. Unfortunately, at times the disorganization of children with LD and their families becomes a vicious cycle; the child's behavior causes disruption in the family, which in turn is increasingly unable to provide the structure, model and discipline the child needs.

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