Title: The Role of Family in Healthy Development
1The Role of Family in Healthy Development
- Lecturer Dr Louise Ellis
- Course HSBH 1005
- Date 27th August 08
2Overview
- We will be looking at
- The family as a system
- Parenting styles
- The infant and families
- Critical thinking exercise
- Video - the changing family
3The Family as a System
- Garbarino (1992) has characterised the family as
the basic unit of human experience. - The family is a whole consisting of interrelated
parts, each of which affects and is affected by
every other part, and each of which contributes
to the functioning of the whole. - Up until the 1970s family studies focused only
on mother-child relationships. We now know things
are more complex even within the nuclear
family. - The term nuclear family refers to a household
consisting of a husband/father, a wife/mother and
at least one child. Still the norm? - Every individual within the family affects every
other individual through reciprocal influence.
4A System within other Systems
- Whether a family is nuclear in structure or not,
it does not exist in a vacuum. - Families are a system embedded in larger social
systems - Neighbourhoods
- Communities
- Subcultures (e.g., religious group)
- Broader cultures (e.g., ethnic origin)
- Family experiences across different cultures can
differ greatly (e.g. husband takes many wives). - There is almost infinite ways a family is
comprised and how they influence each other over
the lifespan.
5A system within other systems
Bronfenbrenners Ecological Approach to
Development
6The Family as a Changing System
- Family membership changes as new children are
born and as grown children leave the home. - The individuals within the family are all
developing individuals. - Changes in family membership or changes in any
individual or relationship within the family
affect the dynamics of the whole. - It is very hard to predict a typical family
system and to understand dynamics in that
system. - The most commonly referred to system of typical
family is that of the family life cycle A
sequence of changes in family composition from
birth to death.
7Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- Duvall (1977) outlined 8 stages of the family
life cycle - Married without children
- Child bearing family (oldest child no more than
30months) - Family with pre-school children (oldest child no
more than 6 years) - Family with school age children (oldest no more
than 12 years) - Family with teenagers (oldest child no more than
20 years) - Family launching young adults (until last child
leaves) - Family without children (Empty next till
retirement) - Aging family (Retirement till death)
- Each stage is characterised by a set of
developmental tasks the family must master to
remain healthy. - Research indicates that most Australians are no
longer travelling through these traditional
stages.
8A Changing System in a Changing World
- To complicate things even further, the family
exists and develops in a changing world. - During the last half of the 20th century, several
dramatic social changes have altered the makeup
of the typical family. - Australian Bureau of Statistics (2007) statistics
that - Almost 1 in 3 people will never marry
- 1 in 3 marriages end in divorce
- 1 in five children are in one parent families
9Trends Affecting Western Families
- More single adults
- Postponed Marriage
- Fewer Children 2 in 2006, 3.1 in 1976.
- More women are working 70 in 2006, 55 in 1976.
- More Divorce 33 in 2007, 10 in mid-1960s
- More single parent families 20 in 2006
- More children living in poverty
- More remarriages and redefined families
- More years without children
- More intergenerational families
- Fewer carers for aging adults
10Parenting Styles
- 2 key elements
- Parental demandingness (level of supervision
discipline) - Parental responsiveness (level of warmth
support)
11Parenting Styles
- Authoritarian Directive Parenting
- Strict control, minimal child input, high
monitoring behaviour - High demandingness / low responsiveness
- Sound academic achievement and uninvolved in
problem behaviour, but poor social skills, low
self-esteem, and increased depression - Authoritative Parenting
- Parent sets and enforce rules but children given
autonomy - High demandingness / high responsiveness
- Sound academic achievement, high social
competence, high self esteem and uninvolved in
problem behaviour - (Maccoby Martin, 1983)
12Parenting Styles
- Indulgent parenting (also referred to as
permissive or non-directive) - Parents are open to child input, they have few
demands and moderate to low levels of monitoring - High responsiveness / low demandingness
- Involved in problem behavior and poor academic
competence, but have high self-esteem, good
social skills, and low levels of depression - Uninvolved parenting
- Laissez-faire approach with little involvement in
or of monitoring of child life - Low responsiveness / low demandingness
- Involved in problem behavior and poor academic
competence, poor social skills, low self-esteem,
and increased depression - (Maccoby Martin, 1983)
13The Infant and Families
- Importance of mothers due to their caregiver
role. - Evidence suggests that fathers and mothers are
more similar than different in the ways they
interact with infants and young children. (Eg
Fathers sense feeding cues in babies just as well
as mothers). - Each parent is equally capable of raising a
child, but quantity and quality of time doing
this can be different (Marsigilo et al, 2000) - Quantity Mothers spend more time than fathers
with children (Bjorklund Pellegrini, 2002) - Quality Fathers spend more quality time in some
instances (Pleck Masciadrelli, 2004) - Mother are spending at least as much time with
their children as they did 40 years ago. Fathers
are now spending more time with their children
(Bianchi, Robinson Mikie, 2006). - Nonetheless, fathers still spend less time with
their children than mothers.
14Styles of Child Interaction
- Mothers and fathers differ in their typical
styles of interacting with young children. - Fathers like to bounce, tickle and surprise
infants. - Mothers like to hold, talk to and play quietly
with infants. - However, fathers are noted to adopt mothers style
of play when they are the sole caregiver. - Perhaps fathers automatically see themselves as
the back up parent (Phares, 1999).
15Infant Development with Fathers
- A fathers primary role in infant support is
traditionally a financial one (Marsiglio et al,
2000) - However, by psychological standards, being warm
and compassionate is more important (Lamb
Tamis-Lemonda, 2004) - When both parents are highly involved with the
infant, social competence grows quickly as the
child develops (Main Weston, 1981) - Affectionate fathering is correlated with
academic achievement in early schooling (Cabrera
et al, 2000) - Fathers like to egg their children into
explorative behaviour during play. This is highly
correlated with breeding secure attachment styles
in later life relationships (Grossmann et al,
2002)
16Mothers, Fathers and InfantsThe System at Work
- To understand the basis of family, it should be
viewed as a 3 person system at the very least
(mother-father-child). - No longer do we consider the mother-child
relationship the core of the family. - Every member of the family has indirect effects
on the other members. - Indirect effect means that 2 persons in the
families relationship is modified in behaviour
when a 3rd person is present. - Eg. Mother and Fathers who communicate well with
each other tend to raise their child in an
equitable and caring way. - An imbalance in communication between the
mother-father relationship can lead to
over-bearing parenting behaviour with the child. - Overall, parents can co-team well if
communication between them is of a high level. If
not, they can undermine each others attempts at
good parenting (Parke, 2000)
17Critical Thinking Exercise
- Are fathers essentially for children to
experience normal, healthy development? - Fatherlessness is the most harmful demographic
trend of this generation. It is the leading cause
of declining child well-being in our societyto
tolerate the trend of fatherlessness is to accept
the inevitability of continued societal
recession Blankenhorn (1995). - Evidence
- Over the past 40 years, the proportion of
children growing up without a father in the home
has more than doubled. - During that time we have seen dramatic increases
in juvenile delinquency, violent crime, drug
abuse, eating disorders, suicide and family
dysfunction. - Studies have demonstrated the association between
father absence and these factors. - Implications
- heterosexual marriage is the only appropriate
context in which to raise children? - Inappropriate for single women or lesbian couples
to have children?