Placeholder canvas

Good parenting leads to healthy and less-violent relationship in kids

Date:

According to a study, it looks like as a parent you must help your child to be healthier, less-violent romantic relationships. A Penn State study found that when adolescents stay in a positive and healthy family environment, their parents using effective parenting strategies like refraining them from hard punishments or telling them the reasons for the decisions they make those adolescents have better and less violent romantic relationships as a young adult.

Researcher Mengya Xia said that the results gave an insight on how early family relationships could have long-term impacts on young adult romantic relationships. “During adolescence, you’re starting to figure out what you want in a relationship and to form the skills you need to have successful relationships,” Xia said. “The family relationship is the first intimate relationship of your life, and you apply what you learn to later relationships. It’s also where you may learn how to constructively communicate or perhaps the inverse, to yell and scream — when you have a disagreement. Those are the skills you learn from the family and you will apply in later relationships.”

ALSO READ: Happy parenting is not too far

Xia said that the ability to form close relationships was an important skill for adolescents and young adults to learn. The researchers found that a positive family climate and effective parenting in adolescence were associated with better problem-solving skills in young adults’ romantic relationships. Additionally, kids who had more positive engagement with their parents during adolescence reported feeling more love and connection in their young adult relationships.

The researchers also found that a more cohesive and organised family climate and more effective parenting during adolescence was associated with a lower risk of violence in young adult relationships.

ALSO READ: Here’s why the elderly are likely to watch more television

“In the study, we saw kids who were more assertive had better problem-solving skills in their later relationships, which is so important,” Xia said. “If you can’t solve a problem constructively, you may turn to negative strategies, which could include violence. So I think it’s important to promote constructive problem solving as a way to avoid or diminish the possibility of someone resorting to destructive strategies in a relationship.” The study is published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

NIA Arrests One Key Conspirator In Rameshwaram Cafe Blast Case

New Delhi: In a significant development in the investigation...

H1B Visa: USCIS Gears Up For Lottery Selection For Fy-25

Due to a technical issue with its website, the USCIS delayed the deadline for visa applications for the financial year 2025 by three days from March 22nd to March 25th, 2024

To Browbeat And Bully Others Is Vintage Congress Culture: PM Modi After 600 Lawyers Write CJI

New Delhi: In response to the voiced apprehensions of...

Allu Arjun’s ‘Pushpa’ Saga: Trilogy Confirmed with ‘The Roar’ Title

As the dust settles from the electrifying release of...