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Parental Involvement With
Teens Leads
to Positive Relationships in Adulthood
Study shows that
closeness to fathers and mothers in adolescence is linked with good
relationships with partners later on in adult life.
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According to a
study featured in the Journal of Family Psychology, a
longitudinal study was conducted on a sample of about 17,000
children born in 1958 in England, Scotland, and Wales. This
study explored the independent effects of (a) father and mother
involvement on good relationships with parents in adolesence and
(b) closeness to parents on good relationships with partners
later in life. According to this study, the results showed that
closeness to mothers and fathers in adolescence are explained by
different factors. Good mother-child relationships in
adolescence seemed to be associated with good father-child
relationships, intact family structures, and high academic
motivation; however, closeness to fathers showed to be unrelated
to family structure but was instead explained by the father’s
involvement in childhood and the fathers’ closeness to the
mother of their children. Father involvement at age 7
significantly predicted closeness to father at age 16. In
addition, closeness to father at age 16 was positively related
to marital satisfaction at age 33. Adjustment to marriage at age
33 was related to good relationships with siblings and both
parents in adolescence as well as an absence of psychological
distress in adult life. The researchers of this study noted that
their findings showed that closeness to fathers and mothers in
adolescence is linked with good relationships with partners
later on in adult life and that closeness to fathers is, to a
great extent, due to high father involvement in childhood,
especially for daughters..[i]
[i]What Predicts
Good Relationships with Parents in Adolescence and Partners in Adult
Life: Findings From the 1958 British Birth Cohort, Journal of Family
Psychology, Vol. 16, No. 2, pp. 186-198.
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