Lecture 6 Family relations
Part 1
How and why do (dynamics of) parents-adolescent relationships change during adolescence?
How are adolescents affected by (changing) experiences in the parent-adolescent relationship, and vice versa?
What is family?
Dictionary definition: married, 2-parent, biological offspring
But: different forms and sizes
Definition may be culture-dependent
Structures common ‘historically’ are not as common today
Ruggles:
Fragmentary household (1 parent, divorced etc.): increased
Extended households (multiple generations, family-units): decreased
In white and in non-white. But different slope of decrease and increase
In all societies, the family fulfills similar functions:
Socialization of children/adolescents
Enduring source of (practical/economic & emotional/social) support
Continuity of relationships across the life course = social embedding
The family as a system
Focus traditionally on mother (primary caregiver)-child/adolescent relationship
Family systems theory: an organized whole, consisting of interrelated parts that influence each other
System: set of elements standing in interrelation among themselves and with the environment
Interrelation: not A affects B, but A & B affect each other
Changing, self-organizing, and adapting to (changes in) its members and the outside environment
System is flexible, but strives for stability (= equilibrium: each person a particular role)
Family = cohesive emotional unit (emotional bond)
Three aspects – family system theory
Holism
To understand family, not enough to look at members separately
Roles (e.g., caretaker)
Illustration of depression: mother can't take her role > influences the system > the child takes the ‘mother'-role
‘hierarchy’/structure
Organized into subsystems
By gender or generations
Dyadic relationship
Marital relationship
Parent-child relationship
Sibling relationship
Triadic level
Particular with both her parents
Family level/whole
Boundaries
At every level (subsystems, inside/outside)
Permeability varies across families
Permeability evolves over time
How much what happens when a specific subsystem of the family affects other subsystems or the entire family?
Spillover vs. Compensation
Associations between dyadic relationships within the whole family
When there are loose boundaries between subsystems
Spillover: do we see that what happens in a systems, affects what happens in other systems?
Compensation: do we see that what happens in a particular system, is compensated in another system?
Compartmentalization: systems are quite independent from each other
Sherill:
Interparental conflict > more than 2 times likely to also report higher levels of parent-adolescent conflict (within a day)
Interparental conflict > 2 times likely to also report higher levels of parent-adolescent conflict (1 day later)
Parent-adolescent conflict > 1,82x more likely interparental conflict
Presence of interparental conflict increases the odds of parent-adolescent conflict at a later moment in time, and vice versa = “spillover”
Mastrotheodoros:
Interparental conflict associated with higher levels of mother + adolescent anger > mother-adolescent conflict
Spillover
Conflict > mood > mother-adolescent conflict
Interparental conflict > mother + adolescent anger > mother-adolescent conflict = spillover
Kouros
Mother- & father-reports!
Marital quality > parent-adolescent relationship quality
“spillover” (same day)
Also vice versa: parent-adolescent relationship quality > marital quality
Lower marital quality > mother-adolescent relationship
“compensation” (next day)
“spillover” can be positive as well + some evidence for “compensation” in the family system
The family as a system
Adolescence: disruption of homeostasis
New balance/equilibrium needs to be found
Process of (family) adaption
3 influences:
Genotype
Shared environment
Unshared environment
Part 2
Parenting styles
Warmth/support - responsiveness
Control-demandingness
Combine > 4 parenting styles
Authoritative
High level of control, high level of responsiveness
Engage in adolescent in decision making (e.g., rules)
Encourage autonomy & independence
Involved & monitoring (positive way)
Open communication & trust
Authoritarian
High levels of control, low level of responsiveness
Strict rules & expectations
Discourage autonomy & independence
Punishment-heavy
Low open communication and trust
Lot of conflict in adolescence (they want to explore and make their own decisions)
Indulgent
Low levels of control, high levels of responsiveness
Very responsive to needs
Insufficient parental guidance
No behavioral expectations = no control/punishment
Adolescents require little self-regulation
Indifferent
Low levels of responsiveness, low levels of control
Not responsive to needs
Insufficient parental guidance
Provide basic needs, no more
Uninvolved, detached & disengaged
No communication & trust
Stability across time/development, specific behaviors change!
Parenting styles can have a huge impact on adolescent development/functioning.
They want more autonomy, make own decisions.
Authoritative
Independent & autonomous
Responsible
High confidence
Strong emotional parent-adolescent bond maintained
Problem solving & critical thinking
Authoritarian
Individuation interfered
Dependent & obedient
Low confidence
Low social competence
Rebellious adolescents
Passivity & lack of school interest
Indulgent
Less mature & responsible (not used to rules)
Conforming to peers
High confidence, but misbehavior
Impulsive
But: could be emotionally secure & independent
Indifferent
Impulsive
Delinquent
Early experimentation with sex, drugs, alcohol
Mature earlier (provide for themselves, no parent-role)
Academic underachievement
Important methodological considerations
Control vs. Control
Control in the context of high support/involvement vs. Low support/involvement
With high support/involvement: “monitoring”
With low support/involvement: “psychological control”
Psychological control vs. Behavioral control
Parental control in different environments
Example: safe environment or war (dangerous outside)
Cultural considerations
Are Asian parents authoritarian? (or protective/”strict-affectionate”?)
Adolescents accept more strict rules
Correlation between ethnic (minority) background and family environment
Still: “even though authoritative parenting is less common in ethnic minority families, its effects on adolescent development are beneficial in all ethnic groups”
Parenting styles & adolescent functioning
Cross-cultural comparison on: substance use, self-esteem, school performance, personal disturbances
Parenting styles relate to these outcomes in the same way in different countries.
Authoritative parenting more positive outcomes
Authoritarian parenting more negative outcomes
Part 3 – Changes in the (dynamic of the) parent-adolescent relationship
Parents and adolescents?
Challenge to deal with for parents
Teenage years are portraited as survival years for parents
“storm and stress”
Storm and stress
Hall & Freud
Detachment inside family > parent-adolescent conflict
Normal, healthy and inevitable
Universal/across cultures
Current scientific view
Yes:
Increase in conflict
Decreases in closeness
Adolescence perceived as most difficult developmental period
No:
Average, but variation across individuals
Minor arguments, do not undermine attachment (no universal detachment)
Not in all cultures (not universal)
Study: large individual differences in family constellations + change over time
Turbulent: low levels of support, high levels of negative interactions, parents more powerful than adolescents
Harmonious: relatively stable, followed by increase
Turbulent: increase, then decrease
Adolescent development isn't a vacuum
Developmental history of parent-child interaction patterns and relationship quality before adolescence = important predictor of how parents and adolescents go through adolescence period.
Laursen: perceived support
Most negative group decreased most in support compared to other relationships
Low negative group: decreased much less
The worse you go in adolescence, the worse you come out
Normative developmental changes
Longitudinal study De Goede in NL
Adolescents from high school
Support/warmth
Mother:
Early-mid adolescence: decreased support
Mid-late adolescence: increase by girls, stable by boys
Father:
Early-mid adolescence: decreased support
Mid-late adolescence: increase by girls, stable by boys
Conflict/negative interaction
Mother:
Steep increase in early-mid adolescence, particularly for girls
Mid-late: decrease for boys and girls
Fathers: similar pattern
Power
Mother:
Early-mid-late: decreases in both boys and girls
Fathers: similar pattern
Parent-adolescent relationship becomes more egalitarian over time
Normative developmental changes in sum:
From vertical to horizontal
From asymmetrical to symmetrical
From dependent to interdependent
Normative developmental changes: why? (particularly conflict)
What do parents and adolescent fight about?
Autonomy-related issues (control-issues)
Adolescents develop their autonomy (sense of independence, but different than independent). Autonomy is cognitive (opinions, discover who they are). Independence: behavioral
Making independent choices and decisions, having independent thoughts and feelings (> increased need for privacy)
Predictors/driving forces > autonomy > parent-adolescent conflict
Separation-individuation theory:
De-individualize from their parents
Evolutionary perspective:
Pubertal development (hormonal changes + individuation > sexual partner)
Parent-adolescent conflict as a predictor of reorganization/realignment of the parent-adolescent relationship
Maturational perspective
Cognitive development (question parental legitimacy of ‘control’ + egalitarian)
Expectancy violation-realignment theory
Discrepancies in autonomy/independence expectations initially, particularly timing autonomy <> self-regulation
Social domain theory
Parental control is effective depending on domain
Discrepancies in personal vs. Prudential/social-convention/moral domain issues
Is it indeed that higher level of conflict go together with lower levels of power?
Early – middle adolescence: Greater increase conflict = greater decrease support & smaller decreases in power (so, more power)
Middle to late adolescence: greater decrease conflict = greater increase support & greater decrease power
Individual differences in support, conflict & power co-occur
Conflict doesn't appear to drive more equality
We don’t know: conflict resolution/open communication vs. Conflict?
Important methodological consideration
Who is the best informant for information on the parent-adolescent relationship/parenting?
Also concerning parenting style!
What do you think?
Parent self-report?
Other parent
Adolescent self-report?
Observant
Study Mastrotheodoros
Findings typically suggest that adolescents experience less support than parents report to provide
But, these results: mothers and fathers report less support than adolescents
Maybe it is because of this sample
Findings typically suggest that adolescents experience higher control than parents report to provide
But, these results: parents report higher control than adolescents
From early to late adolescence: increasing convergence in parent and adolescent views of their relationships. At the end, the reporters are more on the same line.
Birth order
Assumption ‘traditionally’ that within each family the same process are at play for all parent-child dyads = siblings
But: family systems theory!
Parental differential treatment (PDT)?
Parent-adolescent relationship as unshared environment
Adolescence = increase parent-adolescent conflict > for all siblings when the eldest enters adolescence, or for each sibling when entering adolescence?
Individual development theory: each sibling experiences peak in conflict when they reach adolescence.
Learning from experience: only 1st-born experiences peak. 2nd-born trajectory is flatter (because they have already come through this experience and learn from their other children).
Spillover: 2nd-borns' peak happens at the same period in time as 1st-borns' peak. Higher conflict occurs when 2nd-borns are younger
Results: support for learning from experience + spillover
Why learning from experience?
Parents have better coping skills and new conflict resolution strategies
Areas of disagreement already resolved for 2nd-born
All motivated to avoid the stress of conflict with 1st-born
Why spillover?
Increase in conflict > spills over to relationship of parents with younger siblings
Part 4 – Changes in the parent-adolescent relationship & adolescent adjustment
Do parents matter for adolescent adjustment?
Yes: stage-environment fit theory
Parental behavior that does not fit with adolescents’ (changing) developmental needs = adolescent maladjustment
Parents need to be:
Sensitive/responsive
Involved
Encourage open communication
Trustful
Support autonomy & independence
> authoritative parenting
Empirical evidence (meta-analyses)
Rejection + control important for internalizing symptoms
In varying degrees for anxiety and depression
Anxiety: autonomy-granting
Depression: aversiveness
But: parent factors are not the only important factors (18/11%)
Externalizing symptoms
Warmth almost as important for internalizing and externalizing
Hostility more important for externalizing
Behavioral control important for both
Parents matter for adolescent adjustment, but...
Family systems theory: an organized whole, consisting of interrelated parts that influence each other
System = set of elements standing in interrelation among themselves and with the environment
Interrelation: not A affects B, but A & B affect each other
Bidirectional/reciprocal/transactional effects
Adolescents react to parents and changes in the parent-adolescent relationship
And vice versa: parents react to adolescents and adolescents may evoke changes in the parent-adolescent relationship
What is the strongest direction? Study Nelemans:
Maternal criticism leads to higher levels of adolescent depression, but also results for reverse effect = “vicious developmental cycle”
Longitudinal “child effects” for adolescents GAD symptoms. GAD symptoms > higher levels of perceived criticism = relationship erosion effect.
Bidirectional longitudinal associations for adolescent delinquency = vicious developmental cycle
Parenting needs to be: sensitive/responsive (both for adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms)
“spillover” from marital relationship > parent-adolescent relationship > adolescent adjustment (internalizing and externalizing)
Or: marital conflict > parent harsh discipline > externalizing problems
Impact of the parent-adolescent relationship can depend on:
Discrepancies in perceptions of the parent-adolescent relationship
NI: negative interaction/conflict
Mother:
Low levels of conflict adolescent + low levels of conflict mother > lowest levels of depression symptoms
Both agree high levels of conflict > highest levels of adolescent depressive symptoms (cumulative effect)
Father:
Both low levels of conflict > lowest levels of depressive symptoms
Adolescent high levels of conflict + father low levels of conflict > highest levels of depressive symptoms
When the father and adolescent are not on the same line > problem for adolescent
Other social relationships (e.g., peers)
Study:
Highest levels of externalizing behavior: high levels of power imbalance + low friendship quality and high friend externalizing behavior
High friendship quality, high friend antisocial + high friendship quality, low friend antisocial > lower levels of externalizing behavior (with both low and high levels of power imbalance)
Reitz:
Higher levels of positive parenting associated with lower levels of adolescent externalizing problems
Higher levels of friends externalizing problems associated with higher levels of adolescent externalizing problems
Long time: adolescent externalizing behaviors predicted of lower levels of positive parenting but when taking friends externalizing behaviors that was only significant related with higher levels of adolescent externalizing problems, but the parenting did not predict to this outcome anymore.
Thus: positive parenting wasn't associated with adolescent externalizing problems when friends’ externalizing problems were taken into account.
So: the impact of parenting can depend on other relationships
Genetic make-up > individual differences in sensitivity to parenting
Gene-environment correlation versus gene-environment interaction
Diathesis-stress/dual risk model: vulnerable individuals: negative environment > negative developmental outcomes
Differential susceptibility model: not genetic vulnerability, but genetic sensitivity: better or worse
Negative parenting > negative outcomes
Positive environment/parenting > positive outcomes
Graph
Low levels of parental criticism > genetics don't have impact
Combination of high genetic risk of MDD + high parental criticism > highest level of depressive symptoms
In line with diathesis-stress/dual risk model
In sum: parent matter for adolescent adjustment. But: within a larger system.
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