The Concept of Parenting
The Concept of Parenting
The Concept of Parenting
BY
ADEDAYO, AYODEJI PETER
MATRIC NO: 08507
o PARENTING STYLES
o CONCLUSION
o BIBLIOGRAPHY
INTRODUCTION
social, emotional, and intellectual support to a child. It accompanies the intellectual development
that a child achieves because of the mutual relationship attained by the child from the person
responsible for taking care of the child. Parenting in most cases have been taken up by the
biological owners of the children, although there has been a recent increase in caretakers 1.
social support), fathers have tendencies of instilling curiosity qualities when raising children.
Research has demonstrated that children brought up by males have over the years, proven to be
more actively attracted to the external context. They have tendencies of engaging and adopting to
the external environment. These are mainly personality trait of men. This therefore implies that
as child is brought up by a male, they assimilate the emotion, social and psychological ways of
the man.2
This is an indication that, if the father of the offspring is a business oriented person, the
offspring will subsequently adopt the same lifestyle and behavior as that of the father.
However, it is important to note that, it’s not a guarantee, a child who is raised from the paternal
side will adopt the father’s lifestyle though in most cases they do. Reports from various research
findings indicate that other factors may affect the child’s behavior, some of which may include
the parenting styles, the social-economic conditions of the family, and the child’s personality
1
N, Cabrera, et al. “Fatherhood in the twenty‐first century Child development”, 71(1) (200):136
2
C. DiIorio, E. Pluhar, & L. Belcher, “Parent-child communication about sexuality: A review of the
literature from 1980–2002” in Journal of HIV/AIDS Prevention & Education for Adolescents & Children, 5(3-4)
(2003):30
The raising of a child by its parents is very important; anybody can train children because
parenting is more than one staying with his biological parents. In fact as the present researcher
observed, most of the time it is good for one to be trained by his/her biological parents but it is
also best sometimes to be trained by caregivers or guardians. Irrespective of who trains a child,
bringing up a child properly is very essential, this is because children need to be trained properly
in order to be a good person when he/she grown up. Abraham Lincoln has righty said, “There is
only one way to bring up a child in the way he should go and that is to travel that way yourself”.
Theodore Roosevelt also said, “The tasks connected with the home are the fundamental tasks of
humanity”.3
Generally, people occasionally use ‘parenting’ just to describe what parents actually do,
but more often, especially now, ‘parenting’ means something that parents should do. However, a
strange thing happened to mothers and fathers and children at the end of the 20th century which
was called “parenting.4” therefore, it is correct to say that, as long as there have been human
beings on earth, the place of mothers and fathers and many others things related to caring of
Children and taken care of them cannot be disputed and to our surprise it has taken a new shape,
this is because parenting before now is easier than the contemporary times. According to
Merriam-Webster dictionary, the word “parenting” did not appear in the U.S. until 1958 and
In addition, one can say, parenting has to do with something that parents should do. Off
course, to parent is a goal-directed verb; it describes a job, a kind of work. The goal is very clear,
it means to somehow turn your child into a better or happier or more successful adult better than
they would be otherwise, or better than the children next door. The right kind of parenting will
3
Mark Water, The New Encyclopedia of Christian Quotations (Alresford, Hampshire: John Hunt
Publishers Ltd, 2000), 43.
4
Alison Gopnik, A Manifesto Against ‘Parenting’ (2016). Retrieved via internet accessed on 4 June 2022.
produce the right kind of child, who in turn will become the right kind of adult. Parenting is a
process of raising, promoting, and supporting the physical, emotional, social, and cognitive
development of a child to adulthood and across the lifespan. 5 Child rearing is oftentimes defined
interchangeably with parenting. However, many non-parental figures (e.g., society, day care
providers, teachers, governments) offer similar types of care without being a child’s legal
“parent.”6 Care-giving is the act of assuming the main responsibilities for someone who cannot
provide all basic needs for oneself. Examples might include a parent, day care provider, trained
There is an assumption as it regards parenting and the assumption as lasted for many
years which many still hold on till now. The assumption that parents directly or indirectly has
powerful influence on their children through the process of socialization and development has
saturated research, there is a cultural belief systems that, “If children turn out well, it is to the
parents’ credit; if they turn out badly, it is the parents’ fault”. As much as the researcher agrees
with this saying, however, on the other hand there are many children who received undiluted
training from homes and as well deviated as long as they are no more with their parents. As
regards this assumption, many parents have been challenged by various researchers who
highlight the role of biological influences on children’s development. For example, behavioral
genetic studies show that adopted children are more likely to be like their biological parents than
those that were adopted, thus, parents in basic characteristics such as personality, intelligence,
and mental health. Additionally, some scholars have criticized the emphasis on parenting by
asserting that other factors, such as peer relationships, exert a strong influence on development. 7
5
J. B. Brooks, The Process of Parenting (McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2012), 10.
6
H. Abrahan, A Family is What you Make It? Legal Recognition and Regulation of Multiple Parents
American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law Vol. 4 (2017): 25.
7
Robert Bernstein, “Majority of Children Live With Two Biological Parents” Retrieved from the original
on 20 April, 2008. Accessed on 4 June, 2022.
Hence, parents play a significant role in shaping children’s environments and thus
children’s exposure to other factors that influence development, such as peer relationships. 8 For
example, parents are much more likely than children to make decisions about the neighbourhood
in which the family resides, the schools that children attend, and many of the activities in which
children engage; in these ways parents expose children to certain peers and not others.
Additionally, children are more likely to select friends who have similar interests and values,
which are rooted primarily in early family experiences. Parents, who, in American psychologist
Marc Bornstein’s words, are the “final common pathway to children’s development and stature,
adjustment and success”, mediate even broad contextual factors, such as poverty and culture 9
PARENTING STYLES
Parenting styles play an integral role in the development of a child. In fact, research has
revealed that parenting styles can influence a child’s social, cognitive, and psychological growth,
which affects children both in the childhood years, and as an adult. This is because children
develop through a number of stimuli, interaction, and exchange, which surround them. The fact
that parents are regularly around a child’s life they will influence him/her either negatively or
positively.
The commonly known parenting styles are four. They include authoritative, authoritarian,
Parents who use this parenting style teach their children to be independent while at the same time
controlling their actions. Authoritative parents understand their child’s emotions, and they teach
8
Ashish Johri, “6 Steps for Parents So Your Child is Successful” retrieved from humanenrich.com.
accessed on 4 June, 2022.
9
Marc H. Bornstein, Refocusing on Parenting (Psychology Press, 1996), 10
them how to control their feelings. In addition, these parents always demand maturity.
Punishments are prevalent in this style, but they are not violent or arbitrary. This parenting style
has the advantage that children respond accordingly due to the various set limits.
Authoritarian parenting is the next parenting style. It is also known as strict parenting,
and it is both unresponsive and demanding. The central characteristic of this style is that parents
expect their children to comply, and conform to every rule. This parenting style has little open
communication between the parent and the child. Authoritarian parents normally require their
children to follow the set rules without even a single explanation why the rules and limits are set.
According to research, parents who adopt this parenting style are unresponsive to the child’s
emotional needs. As a result, these children tend to display low social competence because their
who adopt this style are normally permissive and lenient, only because they have few
expectations from the child. Indulgent parents are usually involved with their children, but they
set very few rules and limits. Children brought up through this style are often seen as rude and
spoiled. This is because their parents do not teach them how to control their emotions.
Neglectful parenting: Unlike the other three, neglectful parenting is neither demanding
nor responsive. Instead, parents a completely uninvolved with the child’s growth. Neglectful
parents are usually unresponsive and dismissive to their children’s emotional needs. Children
brought up through this parenting style are often mature and independent; although they tend to
display emotional withdraw towards other people. In addition, these children do not express their
feelings easily.
Mother is the first and the best teacher. The family enables children protection in that
suggestively that makes parents responsible for their developing and to make their children grow
into a total personality. The role of the woman or the mother as an educator represents a crucial
resource to the development of the individual identity, which from researchers is seen even as
more important as the very marital status of the parents and the occupation of the parents
themselves. It seems that the feeling of being a mother, to the woman is more powerful than
being a father of given child for the husband. Always in accordance to the biological as well as
physiological relation of mother to the child, represents the first and reasonable part or segment
of the child’s development. This for the reason that mother assures child’s life, as she is the one
who brings the child in this world, and further on she raises them from being little towards
The mother’s function in this regard, has a very important role which as such may be
divided into two parts or directions: The first one is related to the child’s defense, while the other
The first type is connected to the physical protection of the child, which means that the child
must be provided healthcare and hygienic conditions, so that he/she could have a healthy life in a
worm home environment in every sense of the word, including here the ambiance where the
child lives, which must be well enlighten, a healthy place which offers the child to be showered,
10
Ardita Ceka & Rabije Murati, “The Role of Parents in the Education of Children” Journal of Education
and Practice Vol.7, No.5, (2016): 62
The second type is the Psychological protection, which can be reflected through the
child’s emotional security and psychological protection, especially in moments when the child
feels it when the mother is next to him i.e. her. Another group of activities in this regard, are the
maternal functions regarding the child’s development involving here the physical development,
the intellectual development as well as the emotional development of the child. Each child,
which grows up and is educated in the presence of mother, for sure is expected to reach an
appropriate physical, psychological as well as social development. In this regard, these children
have a much better appearance, the look happy and they enjoy the childhood in general. They are
For this reason, mother’s love and care to the child, is full and well completed, and as
such is often accepted by other members of the very family. This type of cultivated love and
affection can be qualified as a key condition for an appropriate development of the children in a
given family. The children experience the physical as well as psychological effects of the
mother, and as such they are taken as model which influences their further development during
their emotional stage of development of their moral values as whole. This element of the so
called child’s identification, the child embeds it in his/her personality for years on and on,
throughout his/her total lifespan. It is planted in their character as well as temperament, and as
such it is reflected through his/ her attitudes and thoughts in interaction or behavior comportment
with the society in general. Almost all culture have developed arrangements which enable
mothers to provide for basic child care while maintaining other duties that are instrumental to
family wellbeing.11
11
Garbarino James, Children Families in the social environment, (New York 1982), 140
The father in a family is a very important factor, concerning the organization of a nice
and appropriately functional development of a household, with a specific accent on the children.
Helping fathers be the ‘best fathers they can be’ is therefore of enormous importance to children.
A god father must be a good parent and a good husband. This person is extremely important
factor in the organization of the family life as a whole, which are the basic ground towards a
happily and joyful family for all the members of a respective family. Many young fathers want to
His presence in the family has a particular importance while it leads the family members,
i.e. the children towards a feeling of safety in their life reigning on the overall family members as
a compact union of members. In these circumstances of safety, the children are the ones who
benefit mostly. However, the so-called subjective experiencing of the parents by their children
varies in different ways and family models, and as such his relevance in a family is much more
different from the one that is performed by mothers. As a result of the gender prejudices in terms
of the duties to be performed in their family, especially regarding their approach and contribution
towards their children’s education, it turns out that mothers are more prepared to undertake their
role in their children’s education, rather than their fathers. Fathers make a powerful difference in
defining expectation and challenging children to do their best. 12 As such, the children learn their
responsibilities and role in the family, when they themselves grow up and become parents, which
is they are mature to play the father’s role in this regard. Given this theory, there has been done
much research, which proves that the relationship between father and child becomes stronger.
This relationship does not result to be dependent from neither of the other two relations i.e. the
Parents play a very prominent role in the lives of the children. The father as the bread
earner of the family provides for the needs of the family, the mother is the homebuilder. Parents
determine largely, the future of the children. Therefore, prospective Christian parents should play
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abrahan, H. A Family is What you Make It? Legal Recognition and Regulation of Multiple
Parents American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law Vol. 4 (2017):
25.
Bernstein, Robert “Majority of Children Live With Two Biological Parents” Retrieved from the
original on 20 April, 2008. Accessed on 29 October 2022.
Cabrera, N, et al. “Fatherhood in the twenty‐first century Child development”, 71(1) (200):136
Ceka, Ardita & Rabije Murati, “The Role of Parents in the Education of Children” Journal of
Education and Practice Vol.7, No.5, (2016): 62
Constantine, Tammy. “Parents In The School: The Impact Of Father's Participation In Children's
Education In Newfoundland”
http://www.mun.ca/educ/faculty/mwatch/vol2/constantine.html Accessed 29 October,
2022 (1999), 1-4
Gopnik, Alison A Manifesto Against Parenting (2016). Retrieved via internet accessed on 4 June
2022
James, Garbarino Children Families in the social environment New York 1982
Johri, Ashish “6 Steps for Parents So Your Child is Successful” retrieved from
humanenrich.com. Accessed on 29 October 2022.
Water, Mark The New Encyclopedia of Christian Quotations Alresford, Hampshire: John Hunt
Publishers Ltd, 2000