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Is positive parenting a teenager possible?

As parents, we often hear from “parenting experts” that we should be using “positive parenting.”  If you have a teenager at home, you have probably thought, “Yeah, right. You come over and try to be positive will the mood-swinging, eye-rolling, rebellious creature living in my home.” But there is new information out that may encourage us to do just that.

New Study Suggests Positive Parenting Impacts Generations
(http://oregonstate.edu/ua/ncs/archives/2009/sep/positive-parenting-can-have-lasting-impact-generations)

A new study just released from Oregon State University shows that positive parenting not only has a positive impact on teenagers, but also on the way they parent their own children. The researchers examined three generations of Oregon families since 1984. They identified 206 boys who were considered “at-risk” for juvenile delinquency and met with and observed them every year from age 9 to 33. The boys’ parents and eventual spouses and children participated in the study.

In this study, positive parenting included factors such as warmth and affection, monitoring of children’s activities, involvement and consistency of discipline. In other words, positive parenting isn’t just the absence of hostility and lack of follow-through.

Much research has shown that negative parenting produces children that are more likely to be antisocial and delinquent as youth. Boys with these traits as teenagers are more likely to be inconsistent and ineffective parents and to have children with more negative behaviors.  What surprised the researchers of this study is that the link from positive parenting experiences was just as strong as the negative. The researchers found that children whose parents had used positive parenting techniques were more likely to have close relationships with their peers, be more engaged in school, and have better self-esteem. These traits in adolescence led to better parenting for the next generation. So, how you parent your children will ultimately impact your grandchildren.

Positive Parenting Tips

The Centers for Disease Control have released a series of tips for positive parenting adolescents. Here are some examples from their list:

Not all of these suggestions will work for every teen or fit with every family, and certainly some are easier to implement than others. Maybe you can find one tip that you feel comfortable working on and with that small step see a difference in your interactions with your teen. Perhaps one day you will see your grown-up son or daughter use that same technique with your grandchild and all that hard work will have paid off.

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