How Parents Could Influence
The EQ and IQ of Their Children
Harvard's visiting faculty member, Daniel Goleman, the author of the highly renowned EQ book, has pointed out that the best place
for children to learn EQ is at home. The direction and values of life are formed at home. The way they speak and act are very much
influenced by their parents. Even though gene plays the nature part; it is the
parental teaching that determines their future.
We all know that parents bear a great responsibility in upbringing of their children. Experiences gained from
educationalist again and again proved that parents are the one who would decide how successful are their children when they
reach their adulthood. How a parent behaves in his/her daily live subconsciously play a vital role in molding the behavior of the
children. In addition, the home education system adopted by the parents and the level of support given to their children will
directly affect their children's behavior development and problem-solving ability. A self-confident child usually comes
from the family filled with encouragement and praising rather than scolding and punishment. Likewise, helpful children mostly
learn to behave the similar way from their parents.
The research from F.E. Williams, a well-known American educationalist, shows that whether the creativity of the children
will continue to develop depends upon the attitude of their parents. His research divided the children into 3 groups namely:
lucky group, failure group and conforming group.
He discovered that, the lucky group where the children are constantly showered with encouragement from their parents
tend to
grow up with self-esteem and able to do what they are best in the latter part of their live. On the other hand, the failure and
conforming groups, due to being afraid of punishment, their creative opportunities and experiences have been negated and
destroyed. As a result, these groups of children grow up to be pessimistic,
passive and nearly lost all their
creativity power.
The research concluded that the pressure and forces exerted by the parents upon their children, regardless the intention, are the main reasons to their miserable future.
If we look around us, it is not difficult to find parents who want their children to perform well in the school in order to
bring them glory. They may force their children to fulfill what they have not achieved when they were young.
Consequently, the
children may suffer from behavioral deficiency, or grow up with frustration and regret of not living accordingly to their own
will.
Originally, children do not understand the significance of report card. However, once they suffer the consequences of punishment
due to failure to live up to their parents' expectation, they will modify or hide their report cards or even lie to their
parents. Children who used to be kind will eventually start to behave violently as they have learnt the violent behavior from
their parents. Children who grow up with everything managed by their parents would not live to be independent and could not
understand the importance of responsibility. When parents judge the value of a man with the benchmark of money, their children
will unknowingly grow up to value everything in life with money.
In addition to the EQ of the children that could be influenced by their parents, the role of parents could affect their
children's intelligence (or, more precisely IQ) too. Genes may create the
blueprint, however it is the environment created by the parents that could stunt a
child's sensory, motor, emotional, and linguistic developments. The neural networks growing inside each
child's head requires a steady stream of vigorous interactions and stimulation with other people, objects, places, and events in
the world. Parents are responsible to create such an enrichment environment. How important is this could be proved from a French
"cross-fostering" study, published in 1989. These researchers
combed through adoption records to find four distinct groups of children (Dr. Lisa Elliot, page 428):
|
1. |
Children born to low-socioeconomic status (SES) parents, who were adopted by other low-SES parents.
|
|
2. |
Low-SES children adopted by high-SES parents
|
|
3. |
High-SES children adopted by high-SES parents
|
|
4. |
High-SES children adopted by low-SES parents (a very rare
group), but the one that makes this study so powerful.
|
Results of their study are as below:
IQ At Age 16
| |
Low-SES adoptive parents
|
High-SES
adoptive parents |
|
Low-SES biological parents
|
92 |
104 |
|
High-SES biological parents
|
108 |
120 |
Therefore, as a parent while we are educating our children, we have to constantly upgrade ourselves and continue to reflect and
learn. For without a mature parent, there will be no correct education at home. Due to improper education methods, children
will experience hardship and failure in many aspects of life. The future of the children
relies on how good their parents nurture them. As a parent, don't you think you have to
be serious about it?
Reference:
Lise Eliot, Ph.D (1999). "What's
going on in there? How the brain and mind develop in the first five years of
life", Penguin Press:UK
Don't forget to subscribe to our ezine to stay on top of the latest news on
child brain development and early child development
|
|