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By:
Anne Murphy Paul
Summary: Why you
don't have total control
over how your kid turns out.
Once, parents were given all
the credit--and all the
blame--for how their
children turned out. Then
researchers told us that
heredity determines who we
are. The latest take:
parents can work with their
children's innate tendencies
to rear happy, healthy kids.
It's a message many parents
will find reassuring--but it
may make others very
nervous.
David Reiss, M.D., didn't
want to believe it. The
George Washington University
psychiatrist had worked for
more than 12 years on a
study of adolescent
development--just
completed--and its
conclusions were a surprise,
to say the least. "I'm
talking to you seven or
eight years after the
initial results came out, so
I can sound very calm and
collected now," says Reiss.
"But I was shocked." This,
even though other scientists
had previously reached
similar conclusions in many
smaller scale studies. "We
knew about those results,
but we didn't believe it,"
says Reiss, speaking of
himself and one of his
collaborators, E. Mavis
Heatherington, Ph.D. "Now
we've done the research
ourselves, so..." He sighs.
"We're not ever going to
believe it, but we're going
to have to act as if we do."
What Reiss and his
colleagues discovered, in
one of the longest and most
thorough studies of child
development ever attempted,
was that parents appear to
have relatively little
effect on how children turn
out, once genetic influences
are accounted for. "The
original objective was to
look for environmental
differences," says Reiss.
"We didn't find many."
Instead, it seems that
genetic influences are
largely responsible for how
"adjusted" kids are: how
well they do in school, how
they get along with their
peers, whether they engage
in dangerous or delinquent
behavior. "If you follow the
study's implications through
to the end, it's a radical
revision of contemporary
theories of child
development," says Reiss. "I
can't even describe what a
paradigm shift it is."
The only member of the
research team who wasn't
surprised by the results,
Reiss recalls, was Robert
Plomin, Ph.D., a researcher
at the Institute of
Psychiatry in London. Plomin
is a behavioral geneticist,
and he and others in his
field have been saying for
years what Reiss has just
begun to accept: genes have
a much greater influence on
our personalities than
previously thought, and
parenting much less. The
work of behavioral
geneticists has been the
focus of considerable
controversy among
psychologists, but it has
been mostly ignored by
parents, despite ample
attention from the media.
That may be because such
coverage has rarely
described just how genes are
thought to wield their
purported influence.
Behavioral geneticists don't
claim that genes are
blueprints that direct every
detail of our personality
and behavior; rather, they
propose that heredity
reveals itself through
complex interactions with
the environment. Their
theories are far more
subtle, and more persuasive,
than the simple idea of
heredity as destiny. It is
by participating in these
very interactions, some
scientists now say, that
parents exert their own
considerable influence--and
they can learn to exert even
more.
NATURE MEETS NURTURE
As behavioral geneticists
understand it, the way
heredity shapes who we are
is less like one-way
dictation and more like
spirited rounds of call and
response, with each phrase
spoken by heredity summoning
an answer from the
environment. Scientists'
unwieldy name for this
exchange is "evocative
gene-environment
correlations," so called
because people's genetic
makeup is thought to bring
forth particular reactions
from others, which in turn
influence their
personalities. A baby with a
sunny disposition will
receive more affection than
one who is difficult; an
attractive child will be
smiled at more often than a
homely one. And the
qualities that prompt such
responses from parents are
likely to elicit more of the
same from others, so that
over time a self-image is
created and confirmed in
others' eyes.
Even as genes are calling
forth particular reactions,
they're also reaching out
for particular kinds of
experience. That's because
each person's DNA codes for
a certain type of nervous
system: one that feels alarm
at new situations, one that
craves strong sensations, or
one that is sluggish and
slow to react. Given an
array of opportunities, some
researchers say, children
will pick the ones that are
most suited to their
"genotype," or genetic
endowment. As they grow
older, they have more
chances to choose--friends,
interests, jobs,
spouses--decisions that both
reflect and define
personality.
In order for genes and
environment to interact in
this way, they need to be in
constant conversation, back
and forth. Since parents
usually raise the children
to whom they have passed on
their genes, that's rarely a
problem: they are likely to
share and perhaps appreciate
the qualities of their
offspring. And the
environment they provide
their children with may
further support their
natural abilities: highly
literate parents might give
birth to an equally verbal
child, then raise her in a
house full of books.
Developmental psychologists
call this fortunate match
"goodness of fit." But
problems may arise if
nurture and nature aren't on
speaking terms--if a child's
environment doesn't permit
or encourage expression of
his natural tendencies. That
may happen when children's
abilities don't match their
parents' expectations; when
their genetically-influenced
temperament clashes with
that of their parents; or
when their environment
offers them few
opportunities to express
themselves constructively,
as is often the case with
children who grow up in
severe poverty. Research has
shown that a poor
person-to-environment match
can lead to decreased
motivation, diminished
mental health, and
rebellious or antisocial
behavior.
The dialogue between genes
and environment becomes more
complicated when a sibling
adds another voice. Although
siblings share an average of
50 percent of their genes,
the half that is
different--and the
kaleidoscopic ways that
genes can combine--leads
their genotypes to ask
different questions and get
different answers from what
would seem to be the same
environment. In fact,
siblings create individual
environments of their own by
seeking out different
experiences and by evoking
different responses from
parents, friends, and
others. Like the proverbial
blind men touching the leg,
the trunk, or the tail of an
elephant, they "see"
different parts of the same
animal. "Our studies show
that parents do indeed treat
their children differently,
but that they are in large
measure responding to
differences that are already
there," says Robert Plomin.
"Family environment does
have an effect on
personality development, but
not in the way we've always
thought. It's the
experiences that siblings
don't share that matter, not
the ones they do."
KIDS IN CHARGE?
One intriguing implication
of behavioral genetic
research is that children
are in many ways driving
their own development,
through the choices they
make, the reactions they
elicit, even the friends
they pick (see "The Power of
Peers," below). But parents
are crucial collaborators in
that process, and that means
that their role in shaping
their children may actually
be larger than it first
appears. How a parent
responds to a child's
genetically-influenced
characteristics may make all
the difference in how those
traits are expressed, says
David Reiss. In his
formulation, the
parent-child relationship
acts as a sort of translator
of genetic influence: the
genotype provides the basic
plot, but parenting gives it
tone and inflection, accent
and emphasis. He calls this
conception of
gene-environment correlation
"the relationship code," and
says that it returns to
parents some of the
influence his study would
seem to give to genes. "Our
data actually give the role
of parents a real boost--but
it's saying that the story
doesn't necessarily start
with the parent," says
Reiss. "It starts with the
kid, and then the parent
picks up on it."
To Reiss, parents' role as
interpreters of the language
of heredity holds out an
exciting possibility. "If
you could intervene with
parents and get them to
respond differently to
troublesome behavior, you
might be able to offset much
of the genetic influence" on
those traits, he says. In
other words, if genes become
behavior by way of the
environment, then changing
the environment might change
the expression of the genes.
Although such intervention
studies are years away from
fruition, small-scale
research and clinical
experience are pointing the
way toward working with
children's hereditary
strengths and weaknesses.
Stanley Greenspan, M.D., a
pediatric psychiatrist at
George Washington Medical
School and author of The
Growth of the Mind, is
actively applying the
discoveries of genetics to
parenting. "Genes do create
certain general tendencies,
but parents can work with
these by tailoring their
actions to the nervous
system of the child," says
Greenspan. He believes that
the responses children
"naturally" elicit may not
be in their best
interests--but that parents
can consciously and
deliberately give them the
ones that are. "You have to
pay attention to what you're
doing intuitively, and make
sure that is what the kids
really need," he says.
A baby with a sluggish
temperament, for example,
won't respond as readily to
his parents' advances as a
child with a more active
nervous system. Disappointed
at their offspring's lack of
engagement, parents may
respond with dwindling
interest and attention. Left
to his own devices, the baby
may become even more
withdrawn, failing to make
crucial connections and to
master developmental
challenges. But if the
parents resist their
inclinations, and engage the
baby with special
enthusiasm, Greenspan has
found that the child will
change his own behavior in
response. The same principle
of working against the grain
of a child's genotype
applies to those who are
especially active or
oversensitive, suggests
Greenspan, comparing the
process to a right-handed
baseball player who
practices throwing with his
left hand. "It feels funny
at first, but gradually you
build up strength in an area
in which you would naturally
be weak," he says.
Of course, honing a
right-handed pitch is
important, too. Parents can
improve on their children's
hereditary strengths by
encouraging their tendency
to seek out experiences in
tune with their genes.
"Parents should think of
themselves as resource
providers," says Plomin.
"Expose the child to a lot
of things, see what they
like, what they're good at,
and go with that." By
offering opportunities
congenial to children's
genetic constitutions,
parents are in a sense
improving their "goodness of
fit" with the environment.
WILL YOUR KID GO TO
YALE--OR TO JAIL?
For those traits that could
easily become either assets
or liabilities, parenting
may be especially critical
to the outcome. "The same
temperament that can make
for a criminal can also make
for a hot test pilot or
astronaut," says David
Lykken, Ph.D., a behavioral
geneticist at the University
of Minnesota. "That kind of
little boy--aggressive,
fearless, impulsive--is hard
to handle. It's easy for
parents to give up and let
him run wild, or turn up the
heat and the punishment and
thereby alienate him and
lose all control. But
properly handled, this can
be the kid who grows up to
break the sound barrier."
Lykken believes that
especially firm,
conscientious, and
responsive parents can make
the difference--but not all
behavioral geneticists
agree. David Rowe, Ph.D., a
University of Arizona
psychologist and author of
The Limits of Family
Influence, claims that "much
of the effort of 'superparents'
may be wasted, if not
counter-productive." And as
for exposing children to a
variety of experiences, Rowe
thinks that this can give
genetically talented
children the chance they
need, "but not many children
have that much potential.
This may not be so in Lake
Wobegon [where every child
is "above average"], but it
is true in the rest of the
world."
But with an optimism worthy
of Garrison Keillor,
advocates of parental
influence insist that genes
aren't the end of the story.
"The old idea is that you
tried to live up to a
potential that was set by
genes," says Greenspan. "The
new idea is that environment
helps create potential." His
view is supported by recent
research that suggests a
baby is born with only basic
neural "wiring" in place,
wiring whose connections are
then elaborated by
experience. Both sides will
have to await the next
chapter of genetic research,
which may reveal even more
complicated interactions
between the worlds within
and without. In the
long-running debate between
genes and the environment,
neither one has yet had the
last word.
THE POWER OF PEERS
It's a world out of a
fanciful children's book: a
place where parents and
teachers don't matter, where
the company of other kids is
most meaningful, where
nothing much would change if
we left children in their
homes and schools "but
switched all the parents
around." That doesn't
describe an imagined
never-never land, however,
but the environment that
every one of us grows up in,
contends Judith Rich Harris.
The maverick writer and
theoretician believes that
peers, not parents,
determine our personalities,
and her unorthodox views
have made the very real
world of psychology sit up
and take notice.
Harris, who is unaffiliated
with any university or
institution, laid out her
radical theory in a 1995
Psychological Review paper,
which was later cited as one
of the year's outstanding
articles by the American
Psychological Association.
Like behavioral geneticists,
Harris believes that
heredity is a force to be
reckoned with. But she sees
another powerful force at
work: group socialization,
or the shaping of one's
character by one's peers.
Central to this theory is
the idea that behavior is
"'context-specific": we act
in specific ways in specific
circumstances. "Children to
day live in two different
worlds: home and the world
outside the home," says
Harris. "There is little
overlap between these two
worlds, and the rules for
how to behave in them are
quite different." Displays
of emotion, for example, are
often accepted by parents
but discouraged by teachers
or friends. Rewards and
punishments are different
too. At home, children may
be scolded for their
failures and praised for
their successes; outside the
home, they may be ridiculed
when they make a mistake or
ignored when they behave
appropriately.
As children grow older and
peer influence grows
stronger, says Harris, they
come to prefer the ways of
peers over those of their
parents. She likes to use
language as an example: the
children of immigrants, she
notes, will readily learn to
speak the language of the
new country without an
accent.
They may continue to speak
in their parents' tongue
when at home, but over time
the language of their peers
will become their "native"
language. Adopting the ways
of their contemporaries
makes sense, says Harris,
because children will live
among them, and not among
older adults, for the
greater part of their lives.
"Parents are past, peers are
future," she says.
It's evolutionarily
adaptive, too. "Humans were
designed to live not in
nuclear families, but in
larger groups," observes
Harris. "The individuals who
became our ancestors
succeeded partly because
they had the ability to get
along with the other
members." The group
continues to influence us in
a number of ways: we
identify ourselves with it,
and change our behavior to
conform to its norms. We
define our group by
contrasting it with other
groups, and seek to
distinguish our group by our
actions and appearance.
Within the group, we compare
ourselves to others and
jockey for higher status. We
may receive labels from our
peers, and strive to live up
(or down) to them. Finally,
we may be most lastingly
affected by peers by being
rejected by them. People who
were rejected as children
often report long-term
self-esteem problems, poor
social skills, and increased
rates of psychopathology.
Our personalities become
less flexible as we grow
older, says Harris, so that
"the language and
personality acquired in
childhood and adolescent
peer groups persist, with
little modification, for the
remainder of the life span."
It's a startling conclusion,
but Harris claims that her
greatest challenge lies not
in persuading people that
peers matter, but in
convincing them that parents
don't. She calls the belief
in parents' enduring
importance "the nurture
assumption," and her
forthcoming book by that
title will argue that it's
simply a myth of modern
culture. She doesn't deny
that children need the care
and protection of parents,
and acknowledges that
mothers and fathers can
influence things like
religious affiliation and
choice of career. But, she
maintains, "parental
behaviors have no effect on
the psychological
characteristics their
children will have as
adults."
In fact, she says, "probably
the most important way that
parents can influence their
children is by determining
who their peers are. The
immigrants who move their
children to another country
have provided them with a
completely different set of
peers. But a less dramatic
shift--simply deciding which
neighborhood to live in--can
also make a difference."
From one area to another,
she notes, there are
substantial variations in
the rates of delinquency,
truancy, and teen
pregnancy--problems parents
can try to avoid by
surrounding their offspring
with suitable friends.
Beyond that, however,
children will make their own
choices. "It's pretty easy
to control the social life
of a three-year-old," says
Harris. "But once the kids
are past age 10 or 12, all
bets are off."
Article courtesy:
www.psychologytoday.com
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