Intergenerational continuity of social competence via parent-child bonding
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
We examined whether parental social competence in adolescence was associated with parent-child bonding and, by extension, offspring’s social competence in childhood. Using a sample of prospective data collected over two decades from n = 389 parents (73% mothers) with n = 555 children (54% girls) who participate in the TRacking Adolescents’ Individual Lives Survey (TRAILS) cohort and its next-generation spin-off study (TRAILS NEXT), we modelled links between parental social competence at age 11, parent-child bonding when offspring were 3 months old, and offspring’s social competence at age 2.5. Adolescents’ assertion and cooperation were linked to parent-child bonding 20 years later, although indirect effects were not significant. We also found no evidence for intergenerational continuity of social competence in form of a direct effect. The results suggest that parent-child relationship quality predicts offspring’s social competence better than parents’ social competence but origins of variance in the latter partly precede parenthood.