The Role Parents Play in Shaping Children's Emotion Regulation | Psychology Today
Supportive parenting leads to positive youth outcomes, but parents rarely use just one strategy. Understanding how various strategies impact child development is crucial.
概览

简介
Parenting and Emotion Regulation in Children
- Parent Socialization of Emotion (PSE): The process by which parents teach children to label, understand, and manage emotions through direct guidance and the family's emotional climate.
- Impact of Parenting Styles:
- Supportive responses: Focusing on the child's problem or emotions leads to positive social, behavioral, and mental health outcomes.
- Restrictive/Punitive responses: Verbal or physical punishment is linked to higher risks of mental health issues, including substance use and eating disorders.
- Three Identified Parenting Patterns:
- Adaptive Support: High use of problem-focused, emotion-focused, and expressive encouragement strategies; low use of minimization or punishment.
- Solution-Focused Responding: Prioritizes problem-solving and acknowledging emotions with low levels of punitive or distress-based responses.
- Diverse Strategy Use: A mix of supportive strategies alongside moderate levels of minimization, punishment, and parental distress.
- Key Findings on Positive Emotionality:
- Mothers who express higher levels of positive emotion in the home are more likely to use "Adaptive Support" strategies.
- A balanced approach—combining problem-solving with the acknowledgment of emotions—is highly effective for developing a child's regulation skills.
- Modeling positive emotions at home is a significant predictor of better emotion regulation in children by age three.
- Research Context: The study, authored by Michelle Ramos, Ph.D., highlights that parents rarely use a single strategy exclusively, suggesting that flexibility and a focus on resolution are key to fostering healthy emotional development.
用户评价
暂无已发布的评价,欢迎率先分享您的使用体验。