Thursday, June 14, 2018

Sink or Swim: Study Reveals Children’s Reaction To Failure Influenced By Parents

I received this information recently and I found it fascinating. What kind of parenting style were you raised with? Do you use the same parenting style? What style do you use if you don't? Let us know in the comments!



A study by PsychTests.com indicates that children who are punished when they fail may develop a fear of failure and challenge.

Montreal, Canada – June 12, 2018 – Helicopter or Free Range? Authoritarian or Authoritative? Whatever child-rearing style a parent adopts will have an undeniable impact on a child’s development, from social skills to self-esteem to how they cope with failure. In fact, recent research from PsychTests reveals that parents who take a supportive or proactive approach when their child fails – encouraging them, tutoring them, helping them study – are more likely to raise children who are ambitious, confident, and self-motivated. Children whose parents punish failure, however, may grow to fear it.

Collecting data from 1,304 people who took their Ambition Test, researchers at PsychTests divided the sample into four groups:

1.     The Punishment Group: Comprised of people (of all ages) whose parents used punishment when they failed as children or teens (e.g. grounding them, taking away privileges, chastising them, etc.).

2.     The Dismissive Group: Comprised of people whose parents didn’t care or didn’t make a big deal of failure.

3.     The Hands-on Group: Comprised of people whose parents took a direct and participative approach to failure (e.g. working side-by-side with the child to help them learn material, offering study tips, tutoring them or finding a tutor, etc.).

4.     The Supportive Group: Comprised of people whose parents did not get angry when they failed, but who also did not let them off easy. Parents in this group were firm yet encouraging (e.g. “Try harder, study more, practice more,” etc.).

According to PsychTests study, each group’s approach to goals, challenges, obstacles, success, and failure noticeably differed:

Have turned down opportunities for fear of not being able to live up to the challenge

·         42% of the Punishment Group
·         34% of the Dismissive Group
·         23% of the Hands-on Group
·         25% of the Supportive Group

Satisfied with their job

·         36% of the Punishment Group
·         34% of the Dismissive Group
·         51% of the Hands-on Group
·         49% of the Supportive Group

Strive to achieve top honors at school/work

·         51% of the Punishment Group
·         51% of the Dismissive Group
·         66% of the Hands-on Group
·         58% Supportive Group

Enjoy intellectual stimulation

·         54% of the Punishment Group
·         53% of the Dismissive Group
·         66% of the Hands-on Group
·         63% of the Supportive Group

Strive to practice healthy lifestyle habits

·         49% of the Punishment Group
·         57% of the Dismissive Group
·         61% of the Hands-on Group
·         50% of the Supportive Group

Achieve their New Year’s resolution

·         20% of the Punishment Group
·         20% of the Dismissive Group
·         32% of the Hands-on Group
·         25% of the Supportive Group

Will give up on a goal as soon as they hit the first obstacle

·         17% of the Punishment Group
·         14% of the Dismissive Group
·         6% of the Hands-on Group
·         8% of the Supportive Group

Motivated to improve themselves

·         73% of the Punishment Group
·         74% of the Dismissive Group
·         84% of the Hands-on Group
·         80% of the Supportive Group

Have goals in mind that they would like to achieve

·         82% of the Punishment Group
·         75% of the Dismissive Group
·         85% of the Hands-on Group
·         84% of the Supportive Group

Receive good performance ratings at work

·         57% of the Punishment Group
·         51% of the Dismissive Group
·         56% of the Hands-on Group
·         59% of the Supportive Group

Enjoy learning new skills

·         58% of the Punishment Group
·         53% of the Dismissive Group
·         61% of the Hands-on Group
·         61% of the Supportive Group

Believe that they can achieve whatever they set their mind to

·         77% of the Punishment Group
·         77% of the Dismissive Group
·         85% of the Hands-on Group
·         82% of the Supportive Group

Are surprised/shocked when they excel at something or do well on an assignment

·         38% of the Punishment Group
·         35% of the Dismissive Group
·         33% of the Hands-on Group
·         30% of the Supportive Group

Aiming for or have already achieved the highest possible education in their field

·         62% of the Punishment Group
·         57% of the Dismissive Group
·         65% of the Hands-on Group
·         69% of the Supportive Group

Shy away from challenges

·         14% of the Punishment Group
·         15% of the Dismissive Group
·         9% of the Hands-on Group
·         9% of the Supportive Group

“We’ve known for decades that parenting style has a significant impact on a child’s development, but the debate between offering tough love vs. loving support still lingers,” explains Dr. Jerabek, president of PsychTests. “Some parents are afraid that if they’re too lenient, their children will become wayward and difficult to control. Others worry that if they’re too tough, their child will grow to resent them, or rebel. In an age of ‘helicopter parenting’ and in light of backlashes against purportedly ‘self-entitled’ Millennials, new parents are likely to be confused about the best way to raise their children. However, research on parenting style, including ours, points to the same, enduring trend: Hands-on and supportive parenting tends to yield more benefits. This translates into an authoritative parenting style - being firm and setting boundaries, but also being supportive and offering encouragement. These parenting styles are generally on par, but as our study reveals, a supportive style is ideal in some situations, while a more hands-on style is necessary in others. Overall, however, children reared with an authoritative parenting approach tend to be happier, more confident, ambitious, and perseverant. Tough love may work under certain extreme circumstances, but it shouldn’t be a parent’s sole approach.” 

Want to assess your level of ambition? Check out https://testyourself.psychtests.com/testid/3294

Professional users of this test can request a free demo for this or any other assessments from ARCH Profile’s extensive battery: http://hrtests.archprofile.com/testdrive_gen_1 

To learn more about psychological testing, download this free eBook: http://hrtests.archprofile.com/personality-tests-in-hr

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About PsychTests AIM Inc.
PsychTests AIM Inc. originally appeared on the internet scene in 1996. Since its inception, it has become a pre-eminent provider of psychological assessment products and services to human resource personnel, therapists, academics, researchers and a host of other professionals around the world. PsychTests AIM Inc. staff is comprised of a dedicated team of psychologists, test developers, researchers, statisticians, writers, and artificial intelligence experts (see ARCHProfile.com). The company’s research division, Plumeus Inc., is supported in part by Research and Development Tax Credit awarded by Industry Canada.
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