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PARENTING STYLES

PARENTING STYLES. Unit 2 :part 2. There are 4 universal parenting styles, each with very different methods of parenting. Each parenting style has different levels of demands and responsiveness and the resulting child is different for each style. Authoritative Parenting.

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PARENTING STYLES

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  1. PARENTING STYLES Unit 2 :part 2

  2. There are 4 universal parenting styles, each with very different methods of parenting. Each parenting style has different levels of demands and responsiveness and the resulting child is different for each style.

  3. Authoritative Parenting This is characterized by high expectations of compliance to parental rules and directions, an open dialogue about those rules and behaviors, and a child-centered approach. Authoritative parents encourage a child to be independent; they are not controlling and allow the child to explore more freely. This is the most recommended style of parenting.

  4. Authoritative Parenting • Results: this results in children with a higher self-esteem. These children may debate with their parents and learn to form their own opinions. These children are successful, articulate, happy with themselves and generous with others.

  5. Authoritarian Parenting This style is characterized by high expectations of conformity and compliance to parental rules and directions. Authoritarian parents expect much of their child but do not explain the rules at all. These parents are likely to hit a child as a form of punishment rather than grounding a child.

  6. Authoritarian Parenting • Results: The resulting children from this type of parenting lack social competence as the parent predicts what the child should do instead of allowing the child to choose by him/herself. These children tend to marry into abusive and controlling relationships. They have also been known to develop mental illness as they enter adulthood. They also have a feeling or sense of relief when 1 or both parents die.

  7. Permissive Parenting Characterized as having few behavior expectations for the child. Parents are nurturing and accepting, but non-demanding. This parent just wants the child to like them at the end of the day and will do anything the child wants to make this happen.

  8. Permissive Parenting • Results: the resulting children are rarely (if ever) punished and are generally immature. The children cannot control their impulses and cannot accept responsibility for their own actions. They tend to live and remain close to where they grew up.

  9. Neglectful Parenting This is known as nonconformist parenting. It is similar to permissive parenting, but the parent doesn’t care much for the child. They are not involved in the child’s life.

  10. Neglectful Parenting • Results: children grow up feeling resentment against their parents for being neglectful and often might be estranged from them in adulthood.

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