NATURE & NURTURE
This follow-up to 2020’s I’m Sticking With You is a lovely expansion of the original buddy story. In the first book, Squirrel realised although Bear’s company could be overwhelming, he really did love having him around.
This time, Chicken wants to join them and form a musical band, and initially Bear and Squirrel reject him... before realising three doesn’t have to be a crowd.
Fans will find it quite strange to see their beloved Bear and Squirrel acting so unkindly, but it’s ultimately another heartfelt message of accepting people’s differences and letting go of your own selfishness – told in Halls’ masterful sing-song rhyme, ideal for early readers or parents telling a bedtime story.
Small’s clean, distinguishable style shows children’s illustrations can evoke huge feelings without resorting to exaggeration.
An expert in genetics explains to that understanding how a child’s DNA shapes behavioural tendencies can help you hone your parenting style
THE way parents bring children up will, of course, have a huge impact on their behaviour, but their genetic make-up can have just as much of an effect, and there’s nothing parents can do about that – is there? Well, yes and no. While parents obviously can’t alter their children’s DNA, they can learn how to understand why their genes can make them act in certain ways, and tailor their parenting accordingly, explains Danielle Dick, a professor of psychology and human and molecular genetics. “Why do our kids do the amazing, crazy, ridiculous, frustrating, and adorable things they do?” she asks. “The answer can be found, partly, in their genes.
“We want to shape our children into responsible, kind, productive human beings, but very often we ignore one of the biggest things shaping our children’s development – their genes.”
Danielle has just written The Child Code, in which she explains that around half the differences between children’s behaviour, ranging from extraversion (how outgoing they are) to impulsivity and anxiety, result from differences in their DNA, with the other half coming from differences in their environments.
“By ignoring the genetic piece, we make it harder on ourselves as parents, because understanding how our children’s genes shape their behaviour can help us parent them to become the best version of themselves,” she stresses.
Here are five key things Dick believes parents need to know about how children’s genes impact behaviour...
DNA doesn’t just code for brown hair or blue eyes, it shapes the way children’s brains form, which impacts their natural tendencies, says Danielle. This explains why some kids are naturally more sociable, and others take longer to warm to new people and situations, for example. While some children are more gowith-the-flow, others can be more prone to distress, frustration, and fear. Some kids have more self-control, and others are more impulsive.” It all starts with differences in their DNA,” says Danielle, who’s created a quiz in The Child Code to help parents work out their own child’s genetic temperament. “To figure out what behaviours reflect your child’s natural disposition, think about their tendencies that show consistency across time and situations,” she says.
Danielle Dick science hold the key to better
“For example, many children get grumpy when they’re tired or hungry, but if your child consistently seems to get very upset over seemingly minor things, and has been this way since they were little, it [may] reflect a disposition toward higher emotionality.”
Because children’s genes influence their temperaments, they also impact the he way other people respond to o them – a happy baby is more ore likely to be held and smiled at than a baby who ho cries constantly, and d a child with low self-control ontrol may be more likely kely to elicit frustration or punishment from rom their parents.
“This creates reates a developmental cascade whereby each child’s genes impact their environmental experiences, which then further impact the child,” explains Danielle.
Children with different dispositions experience the world in different ways, says Danielle - a harsh look from a parent may bring one child to tears, for example, but barely register for another. Meeting M a dog on the street migh might delight one child, and leave another cowering. “Certa “Certain environments can be m more or less stressful, or enjoyable, enjoy depending on the ch child’s genetic disposition,” says Danielle. child’s tantrum tendency
Danielle explains that
when children are little, they are largely at the mercy of adults as to their daily activities, but their reactions to different environments impact whether the activities are repeated or not.
If you take your child to a museum and they love it, for example, you’re likely to take them to more museums. But if they misbehave at the museum, you’re less likely to seek out more museum bonding experiences.
“Through their reactions to certain environments, children indirectly shape the experiences the adults in their life seek out for them,” says Danielle. “As they get older, children directly select environments that match their genetic temperaments.”
This can mean that risk-taking kids climb to the top of tall trees and risktaking adolescents hang out at concerts and bars, while children who are more anxious or introverted prefer to spend more time at home or participating in small group activities. “Chil
By understanding the way children’s genes shape their behaviour, parents can work with their kids to accentuate their natural strengths, and avoid potential challenges that come with different dispositions, says Danielle.
“This is perhaps key for parents: our children’s genes aren’t destiny,” she stresses. “They are born with natural dispositions, but we can play a role in how those dispositions unfold.”
She says that by understanding the good, and the not-so-good associated with different temperaments, and the gene-environment feedback loop, parents can help guide their children better.
For example, children whose genes lead them to be quicker to frustration, anger, or fear need different disciplinary strategies to teach them to manage their disposition, she explains. “But parents frequently mistake their child’s behaviour as being naughty, rather than originating in their child’s wiring, and respond by implementing consequences in ways that make the behaviour worse,” she says.
Mismatches between children’s dispositions and their environments are also frequently at the heart of family tension, she points out. For example, children differ in levels of extraversion from a very young age, and throwing an introvert into an unfamiliar setting with many new people can be overwhelming for them.
“But children’s developing brains don’t have the ability to explain why they’re so upset – they just respond with tears or tantrums.
“Understanding our children’s temperaments, and the needs of children with different dispositions, helps parents understand the why behind their behaviour,” explains Danielle, “allowing them to put practices in place to ease the day-to-day stressors.”
■ The Child Code: The Science Behind Your Child’s True Nature and How to Nurture It, is published by Vermilion, £16.99. Available now.