But I Did Everything Right!
DNA discoveries are revealing why even the best parenting doesn't have the effects experts promise, from breast-feeding to letting kids learn from mistakes.
If there is one thing experts on child development agree on, it is that kids learn best when they are allowed to make mistakes and feel the consequences. So Mom and Dad hold back as their toddler tries again and again to cram a round peg into a square hole. They feel her pain as playmates shun her for being pushy, hoping she'll learn to back off. They let their teen stay up too late before a test, hoping a dismal grade will teach her to get a good night's sleep but believing that ordering her to get to bed right now will not: kids who experience setbacks rather than having them short-circuited by a controlling parent learn not to repeat the dumb behavior.
But not, it seems, all kids. In about 30 percent, the coils of their DNA carry a glitch, one that leaves their brains with few dopamine receptors, molecules that act as docking ports for one of the neurochemicals that carry our thoughts and emotions. A paucity of dopamine receptors is linked to an inability to avoid self-destructive behavior such as illicit drug use. But the effects spill beyond such extremes. Children with the genetic variant are unable to learn from mistakes. No matter how many tests they blow by partying the night before, the lesson just doesn't sink in.
The discovery, reported last December, is part of what is fast becoming the newest frontier in studies of why children turn out as they do. Since the first advice book for American parents appeared in 1811, the child-rearing industry, as well as researchers who have made child development a science, have assumed that, although every child is an individual, there are certain universals. If parents are too take-charge about homework, the child becomes disengaged and eventually gives up; if they are warm and affectionate, kids don't act out. But while most children do respond the way research shows, there have always been "outliers," kids who don't turn out the way experts promise.
After years of ignoring those children, a few scientists now realize that they are telling us something that promises to revolutionize our understanding of child development. In an echo of "personalized medicine" (matching drugs to people's DNA), scientists are finding that how parents treat their children is filtered through the prism of DNA. Parents may intuit that, as they notice that what worked with one child is failing abysmally with another, but now science is pinpointing exactly what combinations of nature and nurture spell gridlock. It is finally dawning on experts that "individual genetic differences are the 800-pound gorilla of child development," says Jack Shonkoff, director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University. "The promise of genomics is that you will be able to tailor experiences as we tailor drugs."
Research showing that the most scientifically rigorous child-rearing advice can blow up on you couldn't come at a worse time for the millions of American parents who are desperate for direction. They are gobbling up how-to books and DVDs, even hiring coaches and consultants. They are tearing their hair out over conflicting advice on even such basics as sleep—let baby cry herself to sleep? Co-sleep? (As it turns out, the conflicting advice may reflect the fact that the "experts' " experience happens to have been with children whose genetic disposition is amenable to their way of doing things.) More than earlier generations, new parents are panicked that they're going to screw up. That feeling is fed by posts on Web sites such as UrbanBaby, in which someone, somewhere, can be counted on to flame your every parenting decision. But for parents who look back in sadness—perplexed that although they did everything "right," their child is not as kind, or intelligent, or self-confident, or well adjusted as the recipes promised—the emerging science offers an explanation, and perhaps an out: with the DNA stacked against you, it wasn't your fault.
One of the strongest and most counterintuitive findings in this nascent field is that children with a sweet temperament, which is under strong genetic control, are the least likely to emulate their parents and absorb the lessons they teach, while fussy kids are the most likely to do so. Fussy children have a hypersensitive nervous system that is keenly attuned to its surroundings—including what Mom and Dad do and say. In studies that are shaking up textbook dogmas, Jay Belsky of Birkbeck University of London has shown that fussy babies are therefore wired to be more strongly shaped by their parents than mellower children are. It is the fussy baby who, read to night after dutiful night, is likely to develop a love of books; the mellow baby, given the same literary diet, might just as easily grow into a teen who has no interest in reading anything longer than a text message. The mellow baby, immune to your charms, is more likely to show signs of road rage from the day she first takes her tricycle out for a spin, even though she grew up watching your saintly temper control. Children who go with the flow of new people and new situations are like Teflon: good parenting doesn't stick to them—but neither, necessarily, does bad parenting. They're the young adults who can't form close, meaningful relationships despite the unconditional love you showed them. "Kids with difficult temperaments are more sensitive to the effects of parenting," says Belsky. "You can get by with sloppier parenting if you have a 'good temperament' kid." Even children who fall between the extremes are generally closer to one than the other.
Although whether you have an easy or a fussy child is obvious, other innate differences that shape whether and how a child will respond to how parents raise them are less apparent. But since they reflect the presence of a DNA variant, they are all candidates for being pinpointed with a genetic test that will help parents know what to expect:
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Member Comments
Posted By: shesgotagun! @ 09/05/2008 10:36:00 AM
Comment: I almost agreed with this article, but after reading the 6th paragraph decided it was a crock of baloney. I was that mellow baby with the sweet temperment and my sister was always the fussy one. Years later, I became the succesful college student in who already has an engineering job secured after college, and my sister graduated high school with no motivation for college or even a job, and has anti-social tendancies. My parents raised us the same way, (and did a great job!), and are incredibly confused as to what happened. (My sister and I are 2 years apart) But there were other social factors that affected our outlook and motivation for life.
Every child is different, no parent should simply categorize them the way this article does. Although there may be things that are out of your control, that doesn't mean it can be simply blamed on genetics. Most siblings start on a fairly even playing field, it's what happens socially, by parenting, family gatherings, school and church groups, etc. that builds their character.
Posted By: ykarpov @ 09/04/2008 3:54:38 PM
Comment: I am very disappointed with this article. The major claims of the author are as follows: (a) all child psychologists believe that ???kids learn best when they are allowed to make mistakes and feel the consequences??? while totally ignoring the role of genetics in child development, and (b) genetics crucially determines ???why children turn out as they do???. Both these statements are highly disputable. Firstly, in contemporary child psychology, there are different schools of thought. Only one of these schools, constructivism, stresses the importance of children???s independent explorations for their development. But, another very powerful school of thought, nativism, stresses the major role of genotype in children???s development, in particular, in intellectual development. Secondly, and more importantly, the view of genotype as crucially determining the child???s developmental path, although supported by some influential psychologists, totally ignores the increasing pool of data that child development is vitally determined by the social environment. Yes, indeed, children???s temperaments, their speed of information processing, as well as some other aspects of their development are rooted in genotype. But, as early as in the 1930s, the famous psychologist A. Luria showed that specifically human higher level mental abilities (such as the use of mnemonics for memorization) are not determined by genes. Since then, psychologists have experimentally demonstrated how social influences (in particular, parenting and instruction) determine children???s development in each age period. For example, attachment (strong emotional bonds between infants and primary caregivers) has been shown both to be associated with parenting style and to predict later cognitive, social, and emotional development of the child. Adult mediation of children???s object-centered explorations during the second and third years of life has been proven to lead to the development of children???s language and symbolic thought. Helping children organize and enact their play during the period of early childhood has been shown to result in the development of their self-regulation, cognition, and social skills, which represent the major components of school readiness. It has been demonstrated that learning at school leads to the development of children???s formal-logical thought; what is important, a lack of schooling has been shown to result in serious deficiencies of formal-logical thought even in adults no matter what their genotypes were. Finally, it has turned out, that, in contrast with popular wisdom, even adolescents??? development (in particular, identity formation and the development of moral reasoning) is vitally determined by influences from significant adults. In light of these data, it is parents and teachers, not genetics, that crucially determine ???why children turn out as they do,??? no matter how comforting the opposite point of view may be for some parents and teachers.
Posted By: Gina Pera @ 08/24/2008 9:21:50 PM
Comment: There are DECADES of research on this issue, Parent123. And why the author didn't mention it, I can't imagine. Perhaps the "parenting experts" just can't summon the guts to admit they were wrong all these years and the experts in ADHD were right!
Read a few good books about Attention-Deficit/Hyyperactivity Disorder. Some respects experts include Dr. Martin Kutscher, Dr. Russell Barkley, Dr. Daniel, Amen, and many more.