Contemporary research on parenting. The case for nature and nurture

Am Psychol. 2000 Feb;55(2):218-32.

Abstract

Current findings on parental influences provide more sophisticated and less deterministic explanations than did earlier theory and research on parenting. Contemporary research approaches include (a) behavior-genetic designs, augmented with direct measures of potential environmental influences; (b) studies distinguishing among children with different genetically influenced predispositions in terms of their responses to different environmental conditions; (c) experimental and quasi-experimental studies of change in children's behavior as a result of their exposure to parents' behavior, after controlling for children's initial characteristics; and (d) research on interactions between parenting and nonfamilial environmental influences and contexts, illustrating contemporary concern with influences beyond the parent-child dyad. These approaches indicate that parental influences on child development are neither as unambiguous as earlier researchers suggested nor as insubstantial as current critics claim.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Child
  • Child Development* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Intelligence
  • Maternal Behavior / physiology
  • Maternal Behavior / psychology
  • Object Attachment
  • Parenting / psychology*
  • Peer Group
  • Temperament