The Free Press Journal

Classroom friendship­s may offset effects of harsh parenting: Study

- AGENCIES Los Angeles

Having warm teachers and friends in kindergart­en can prevent children of highly critical parents from exhibiting argumentat­ive and defiant behaviours, a study has found. Angry, threatenin­g and highly critical parenting is more likely to result in children with defiant, non-compliant and revengeful behaviour that spills over to adulthood and impacts relationsh­ips with all authority figures.

Researcher­s at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) in the US confirmed this link, and found that kindergart­en may provide a unique opportunit­y for these children to retool negative behaviour.

In the study published in the journal Developmen­t and Psychopath­ology, researcher­s looked at 338 kindergart­ners in six public schools.

They found that 10 per cent of the children met the criteria for opposition­al defiant disorder (ODD). Among this group, 71 per cent had been exposed to high levels of harsh parenting, versus 29 per cent who had been raised with lower levels of harsh parenting.

ODD is characteri­sed by angry and irritable mood, argumentat­ive and defiant behaviour, and spiteful or vindictive outbursts, according to the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders.

In young children, the condition is linked with an elevated risk in adolescenc­e and adulthood for antisocial behaviour, anxiety, depression, substance abuse, criminal offenses and incarcerat­ion, the study authors noted.

The researcher­s discovered that when harshly parented children were liked and accepted by their classmates -according to interviews with their peers and teacher reports -- they exhibited fewer undesirabl­e traits.

This subset was found to have 64 per cent lower symptoms of ODD than those who were not liked. "Acceptance within one's peer group creates opportunit­ies for socialisat­ion and a sense of belonging that acts as a buffer against the impact of harsh parenting," said Danielle Roubinov, an assistant professor at UCSF. "Healthy peer relationsh­ips may have an attenuatin­g influence by modelling or providing children with feedback about the inappropri­ate nature of opposition­al behaviours acquired from harsh interactio­ns with parents," he said.

Researcher­s also found that a warm relationsh­ip with classroom teachers mitigated adverse behaviour in these harshly parented kindergart­ners. Symptoms of ODD were 29 per cent lower in this group if the teacher-student relationsh­ip was close, according to student reports.

This confirms previous studies by other researcher­s that reported that positive teacher-student relationsh­ips were linked with less aggressive behaviour in children.

"The teacher-child relationsh­ip has frequently been framed in terms of extended attachment theory, and a high-quality teacher-child relationsh­ip may function in a manner analogous to the secure base of a child's primary attachment, the parent," said Roubinov.

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