Family Relationships Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D. Department of Psychology The University of West Florida.
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Transcript Family Relationships Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D. Department of Psychology The University of West Florida.
Family Relationships
Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D.
Department of Psychology
The University of West Florida
Family Relationships
• Family Systems
– Multiple dyadic relationships
– Changes in individual impact changes in multiple
dyads and can create disequilibrium
– Disequilibrium can result in both positive and
negative outcomes
– What are some sources of disequilibrium?
Parental Development in Midlife
• Climacteric—changes in functioning of sex
organs
– Males—reduced level of testosterone
– Females—reduced levels of estrogen
• Sociocultural changes
– Potentially higher levels of professional/career
responsibilities
– Changes in peer groups for parents
– Facing expenses (e.g. college expenses;
mortgages, health care)
– Higher levels of satisfaction as adolescents
become more autonomous
Sibling Relationships
• Multiple and Potentially Overlapping Relationships
– Caregiver
– Buddy
– Critical
– Rival
– Casual
• Relationships move from critical/rival to more
buddy/casual across childhood and adolescence
• With family change (e.g. divorce) relationships can
get closer
Extended Family Relationships
• Traditional Cultures (e.g. Kyrgyzstan):
– Single children frequently live with parents until
marriage
– Females tend to move to male’s village and home
upon marriage
– Marriage is younger
– Ties close with extended family (e.g.
grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins)
– Closeness with extended family members similar
among USA minority groups
– European adolescents show similar closeness
Extended Family Relationships
• Divorce or Death of a Parent:
– Relationship with grandparents becomes closer
– With maternal custody upon divorce, maternal
grandfather assumes aspects of father role
– Extended family members fill multiple roles
Parenting Styles: Diana Baumrind
• Parenting defined by two dimensions:
– Responsiveness—warmth, caring, sensitive,
supportive
– Demandingness—expectations, supervising,
monitoring
Parenting Style: Authoritarian
• Low responsiveness
• High demandingness
• Characteristics
– Corporal punishment, severe sanctions against
infractions
– High expectations with Low support
– Decisions are not open to discussion
– Rationales are not provided
Parenting Style: Authoritarian
• Child & Adolescent Outcomes:
– Rigid in perspective
– Lack problem-solving skills
– Likely not eager to make difficult decisions
– Passive
– Dependent
– Conforming (looks to powerful peer groups)
Parenting Style: Permissive—Indulgent
• High responsiveness
• Low demandingness
• Characteristics:
– Few rules or boundaries
– Adolescent is not accountable for behavioral
outcomes
– Responds positively to most requests made by the
adolescent
– Few negative consequences for problem behaviors
– Inappropriately involves adolescent in parental
lives
Parenting Style: Permissive—Indulgent
• Child & Adolescent Outcomes:
– Poor emotional control
– Low persistence to difficult or unpopular tasks
– Frequent externalizing behavior when desires are
denied
– Poor decision-making skills
– Blurred boundaries between adolescent and
parent
Parenting Style: Disengaged
(neglectful, indifferent)
• Characteristics:
– Inconsistent discipline based on impact of
behavior on parents’ own activities and
preferences
– Few rules or boundaries
– Punishment, when given, can be harsh
– Low parental monitoring
Parenting Style: Disengaged
(neglectful, indifferent)
• Child & Adolescent Outcomes:
– Low levels of performance in social and academic
domains
– Frequently poor emotional control
– Typically lacks clear understanding of contingency
of outcomes on behaviors
– May seek out peers for support with little
attention to norms of the peer group
Parenting Style: Authoritative
• High responsiveness
• High demandingness
• Characteristics:
– Sets consistent and reasonable boundaries for
adolescents’ behaviors
– Uses reason and discussion as first option for
discipline
– Low-to-no use of corporal punishment
– Models civil discussion
– Monitors adolescents’ behaviors
– Allows adolescents’ involvement in family decisions
– Maintains parental role with little or no enmeshment
Parenting Style: Authoritative
• Child & Adolescent Outcomes:
– Higher levels of achievement in social and
academic domains
– Recognizes relationship between behaviors and
outcomes
– Adaptive level of emotional control
– Develops adaptive decision-making skills
– Lower levels of psychological distress
– Appropriate peer relationships
Parenting Style: Traditional Parenting
• High Responsiveness
• High Demandingness
• Characteristics
– Compliance with cultural and traditional demands
with little or no negotiation
– High levels of warmth & closeness
– High levels of family interdependence
– Likely associated with collectivist cultures
– Demandingness linked to narrow socialization
Parenting Style: Traditional Parenting
• Child & Adolescent Outcomes:
– Generally positive within the cultural boundaries
– May experience stress as cultural borders are
crossed (e.g. schooling; dating)
Adolescent Individual Differences: A Complex
View of Parenting
• Within families parenting can vary
– Among siblings based on individual differences
– Within individual based on developmental change
(e.g. puberty)
– Within individual based on situational change (e.g.
peer groups, schooling)
• The relationship between parent and
adolescent is bidirectional and reciprocal
• Siblings can experience variation in family
environments
Attachment and Parenting
• Attachment: close, committed and secure
emotional relationship with another (usually
caregiver)
– Secure attachment: relationship that allows for
exploration and which is used for comfort and
soothing given distress
– Insecure attachment: relationship within which
there is uncertainty, wariness, and resistance to
comforting and soothing behaviors
Attachment and Parenting
• Secure attachment related to positive
outcomes in adolescence
• Balance between autonomy and relatedness is
reached in secure attachment
• Early attachment (infancy) is moderated and
modified by forces in the environment
Parent-Adolescent Conflict
• Generally disputes are over minor (in the
great scheme of things) issues
• Adolescents generally like their parents
• Level of conflict changes across adolescence
– Early and middle adolescence tends to be
associated with higher levels of conflict
– Late adolescence and emerging adulthood tend to
be associated with reduced levels of conflict
Parent-Adolescent Conflict
• Related to:
– Increased cognitive capability to construct more
complex and involved arguments
– Relative control over issues perceived by
adolescent to be personal choices
– Parents’ coding themes around risks for harmful
outcomes in themes related to personal choice
(e.g. choice of peers instead of risk for drug and
criminal involvement; romantic relations instead
of risk for STD’s)
Parent-Adolescent Conflict
• Conflict is minimized and has more positive
outcome if parent-adolescent relationship is
renegotiated across the adolescent years
• What parenting style is most likely associated
with renegotiation?
Culture and Conflict with Parents
• “Cultures can take the raw material of nature
and shape it in highly diverse ways.” (Arnett,
2010, pg 193).
– The biological change that is related to conflict
with parents leads to quite different levels and
sources of conflict across cultures
– Narrow socialization, as within collectivist
cultures, leads to less conflict and adherence to
parental and generational authority
Emerging Adults’(EA) Relationship with Parents
• In USA, frequently associated with residing
outside the home for the first time
• Parents frequently lose direct control and
monitoring capabilities
• EA’s who reside outside the home typically
report more positive relationships with
parents
• EA’s who return to their family of origin for
residence typically have a decline in
relationships.
Emerging Adults’(EA) Relationship with Parents
• In other cultures,
– EA’s tend to live with family of origin longer
– EA’s tend to maintain positive relationships
Historical Change and the Family
• Increase in divorce rate
• Increase in two wage-earner families
• Increase in single family households
Divorce, Remarriage, Single Parenthood, & Dual
Wage-Earner
• Examining the impact of divorce:
– Family Structure
– Family Process
• Family conflict prior to divorce linked to
problems following divorce
• Post-divorce relationship between parents
linked to adolescent outcomes
• Reaction of custodial parent linked to
adolescent outcomes
Divorce, Remarriage, Single Parenthood, & Dual
Wage-Earner
• Post-divorce relationship between parents
linked to adolescent outcomes
– Consistent parenting practicespositive
outcomes
– Civil relationships between divorced
parentspositive outcomes
Divorce, Remarriage, Single Parenthood, & Dual
Wage-Earner
• Reaction of custodial parent linked to
adolescent outcomes
– Enmeshed Relationship (blurred boundaries
between parent and adolescent)linked to
negative outcomes
– Reduced parental monitoringlinked to negative
outcomes
– Economic stresslack of opportunitylinked to
negative outcomes
– Maternal remarriagecan be related to negative
outcomes
Single Parenthood
• Parents (typically mothers) who have raise
children alone experience challenges to family
process factors
– Adaptive levels of parental monitoring, economic
opportunity, attachment, and overall parenting
style can lead to positive outcomes
– Economic stressors can add to the challenges
– Extended families can mitigate many challenges
Dual Wage-Earner Families
• Few differences observed over time in
adolescents from dual earner families
• Differences may stem from motivation for
work
– Parents who feel trapped in an unsatisfying job
and feel great pressure to work tend to be related
to adolescents with poorer outcomes
– Mothers who feel fulfilled and work outside the
home by preference tend to have daughters who
are well adjusted and have positive outcomes
Physical and Sexual Abuse in the Family
• Florida Abuse Hotline: 1-800-96-ABUSE
– Individuals who work in a professional capacity
with children are required to report suspicion of
abuse
• Physical Abuse: abuse in the form of harm to
body of a non-sexual nature
• Sexual Abuse: abuse with sexual overtones
Physical Abuse in the Family
• Abusive parents tend to have experienced
harsh if not abusive families themselves
• Caution in interpretation: most individuals
who were abused DO NOT abuse their
children.
• Families in distress are more likely to have
physical abuse (e.g. economic, psychological,
health stressors)
• Males more likely than females to be
physically abused
• Abused adolescents: more aggressive,
depressed, other problem behavior
Sexual Abuse in the Family
• Females more likely than males to be sexually
abused
• Abusive fathers not likely to be aggressive
• Abusive fathers awkward and insecure in
social relationships
• Distant relationship with spouse/partner
Sexual Abuse in the Family
• Abused adolescent:
– Violation of trust
– Difficulty in relationships
– Extreme sexual reactions (avoidant/promiscuous)
– Higher risk for
• Substance abuse
• Psychological disorders
• Suicidal ideation and attempts
Runaways & Throwaways
• Runaway Criteria:
– Child leaves home without permission and stays overnight
– Child 14 years or younger leaves home without permission
and chooses not to come home when expected to and
stays away overnight
– Child 15 years old or older who is away from home and
chooses not to come home when expected to and stays
away overnight
Runaways & Throwaways
• Throwaway Criteria:
– Child is asked or told to leave home by a parent or
other household adult, no adequate alternative
care is arranged, and the child is out of the
household overnight
– Child who is away from home is prevented from
returning home by a parent or other household
adult, no adequate alternative care is arranged,
and the child is out of the household overnight.
Runaways & Throwaways
• Runaways’/Throwaways’ Families:
– Abusive situations (approx 70% of runaways)
– Conflict with parents
– Conflict between parents
– Alcoholism and other drug abuse by parents
– Parental neglect
Runaways & Throwaways
• Attributes of the adolescent Runaway/Throwaway
–
–
–
–
–
Problems with substance abuse
Criminal/Delinquent activity
Problems/conflict at school
Psychological problems (e.g. depression)
Gay/Lesbian/Transgendered
• Long-term Runaways/Throwaways (weeks/months)
prey for exploitation
Global Problems: Street Children
• Displacement by war, famine
• Family poverty
• Kidnapping for exploitation
• Gender-based exploitation
Discussion Exercise
• Please read the piece at the website below
and be ready to use it in our class discussion
on Chapter 7 (Family Relationships).
• http://www2.lv.psu.edu/jkl1/runawaylives/Fe
elingLonelyAndUnwanted.html
• As read the piece by “F,” how might her take
relate to what you read about families
(structure, process) and their relationship to
adolescents’ experiences of distress and risk.