Parents act differently with different
children – for example, being more positive with one child and more
negative with another. A new longitudinal study has found that this
behavior negatively affects not only the child who receives more
negative feedback, but all the children in the family. The study also
found that the more risks experienced by parents, the more likely they
will treat their children differentially.
Carried out at the University of Toronto
with researchers from McMaster University and the University of
Rochester, the study appears in the journal Child Development.
“Past studies have looked at the effects
of differential parenting on the children who get more negative
feedback, but our study focused on this as a dynamic operating at two
levels of the family system: one that affects all children in the family
as well as being specific to the child at the receiving end of the
negativity,” explains Jennifer M. Jenkins, Atkinson Chair of Early Child
Development and Education at the University of Toronto, who led the
team.
The study looked at almost 400 Canadian
families with children whose average age ranged from 2 to 5. Most
previous studies of differential parenting have included only sibling
pairs, making it difficult to determine the dynamics that affect the
whole family and those that affect individual children; this study
included up to four children per family and used special statistical
techniques to differentiate between dynamics operating across the whole
family and those specific to individual children. Information came from
mothers’ reports and observation in the home.
The researchers also constructed a
cumulative risk index to gauge the number of stressful circumstances in
the mother’s current or past life, such as single parenting, low income,
past abuse, and safety in the home. Mothers with a lot of risk factors
were found to be more differential in how they treated their children
than moms whose lives were less stressful. Mothers with more risk
factors showed a wider range in the amount of warmth and affection they
showed and how harsh and irritable they were with different children in
the family.
Story source Punchng
Nice article
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