For many kids, rejection by father can be even more devastating
than by mother.
Move over, tiger moms. Dads can play an even more significant role in
the development of happy, well-adjusted children than do mothers, a new study
indicates. Just in time for Father's
Day, findings from a large-scale review of research shed light on how parental
acceptance and rejection can affect the personalities of progeny well into
adulthood.
"In our 50 years of
research in every continent but Antarctica, we have found that nothing has as
strong and consistent an effect on personality development as does being
rejected by a parent -- especially by a father -- in childhood," said
study co-author Ronald Rohner, director of the Ronald and Nancy Rohner Center
for the Study of Interpersonal Acceptance and Rejection at the University of
Connecticut, in Storrs.
The study, published
recently in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Review,
analyzed 36 studies, from 1975 to 2010, involving almost 1,400 adults and 8,600
children in 18 countries. The children ranged in age from 9 to 18, and adults
were between 18 and 89. All the studies included in
the review included an assessment of seven personality traits considered
central to what is called "parental acceptance-rejection theory."
Those traits -- aggression,
independence, positive self-esteem, positive self-adequacy, emotional
responsiveness, emotional stability and positive worldview -- were evaluated
using self-report questionnaires. Participants were asked about their parents'
degree of acceptance or rejection during their childhoods and about their own
personality characteristics or tendencies.
"The study shows a
strong relationship between those seven traits and the experience of feeling
accepted and cared about by your parents," said Dr. John Sargent, a
professor of psychology and pediatrics at Tufts University School of Medicine
and chief of child and adolescent psychiatry at Tufts Medical Center, in
Boston.
"What's really
important to kids is to know they're accepted by their parents," Sargent
said.
Study author Rohner said
fathers may have a greater impact on a child's personality because children and
teenagers pay more attention to the parent who seems to have greater
interpersonal power, or influence, in the family's power hierarchy.
He explained that when a
father is perceived as having more power, even if he spends less time with the
children, he can have a greater impact. That's because his comments or actions
seem to stand out more notably. This is despite the fact that, all over the
world, mothers tend to spend more time with kids than fathers do.
While not being accepted
causes identifiable personality issues, acceptance doesn't necessarily confer
particular benefits. "Unfortunately, humans respond more dramatically to
negative things," Rohner said. Rejection predicts a specific set of
negative outcomes -- such as hostility, low self-esteem, negativity -- while
feeling loved and accepted is not as closely associated with particular
positive outcomes, he explained.
There was no difference
seen in the importance of a father's love for girls versus boys.
The study does not
establish a causal connection between respondents' personalities and
perceptions of being accepted or rejected.
Rohner said the research
shows that society tends to place too much emphasis on the impact of mothers on
children, often blaming them for troublesome personality traits or behaviors,
even into adulthood. "We need to start giving greater acclaim to dads, and
put them on an equal footing with moms in terms of their impact on children,"
he said.
"Our work should
encourage dads to get really involved in the loving care of their children at
an early age," Rohner said. "Their kids will be measurably better
off."
More information
(SOURCES: Ronald P. Rohner,
professor emeritus and director, Ronald and Nancy Rohner Center for
Interpersonal Acceptance and Rejection, University of Connecticut, Storrs,
Conn.; John Sargent, M.D., professor, psychology and pediatrics, Tufts
University School of Medicine, and chief, child and adolescent psychiatry,
Tufts Medical Center, Boston; May 2012 Personality and Social Psychology
Review)
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