Genes May Influence Parenting Style

A new study refutes the popular theory that how adults parent their children is strictly a function of their own upbringings.
Genes May Influence Parenting Style
"One of the most consistent and striking findings to emerge from this study was the important role that children's characteristics play in shaping all aspects of parenting," the authors write. Shutterstock*
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A new study refutes the popular theory that how adults parent their children is strictly a function of their own upbringings.

While environmental factors do play a role in parenting, so do a person’s genes, says S. Alexandra Burt, associate professor of psychology at Michigan State University and co-author of a study led by doctoral student Ashlea M. Klahr.

“The way we parent is not solely a function of the way we were parented as children,” Burt says. “There also appears to be genetic influences on parenting.”

Klahr and Burt conducted a statistical analysis of 56 scientific studies from around the world on the origins of parenting behavior, including some of their own research. The comprehensive analysis, involving more than 20,000 families from Australia to Japan to the United States, found that genetic influences in the parents account for 23 percent to 40 percent of parental warmth, control, and negativity toward their children.

“What’s still not clear, however, is whether genes directly influence parenting or do so indirectly, through parent personality for example,” Klahr says. The study appears in Psychological Bulletin.

Cause and Consequence

The study sheds light on another misconception: that parenting is solely a top-down process from parent to child. While parents certainly seem to shape child behavior, parenting also is influenced by the child’s behavior—in other words, parenting is both a cause and a consequence of child behavior.

“One of the most consistent and striking findings to emerge from this study was the important role that children’s characteristics play in shaping all aspects of parenting,” the authors write.

Ultimately, parenting styles stem from many factors.

“Parents have their own experiences when they were children, their own personalities, their own genes. On top of that, they are also responding to their child’s behaviors and stage of development,” Burt says. “Basically, there are a lot of influences happening simultaneously.

“Long story short, though, we need to be sensitive to the fact that this is a two-way process between parent and child that is both environmental and genetic.”

Source: Michigan State. Republished from Futurity.org under Creative Commons license 3.0.

*Image of family via Shutterstock

 

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