Saturday, November 1, 2014

Parenting has very little influence on a child's intelligence later in life

Many parents believe that interaction with their children, whether it is reading them a story at bedtime or having family meals each evening, will have some influence on their intelligence later in life. But a new study suggests this is not the case, and their later-life intelligence may be more dependent on genetics. The research team was led by Kevin Beaver, a criminology professor at Florida State University. According to Beaver and his team, the link between parenting and offspring intelligence is controversial. Some studies claim that parental behavior toward their children can influence how intelligent they will be in adulthood. But Beaver and other researchers suggest that this association may be incorrect because such studies have not accounted for genetic transmission. With this in mind, the researchers decided to study the link between parental behavior and later-life intelligence among a nationally representative sample of youths. For comparison, the team also analyzed aged-match adopted youths who were part of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. "The sample of adoptees is able to more fully control for genetic confounding," the researchers note. The behaviors of participants' parents were assessed, and participants completed an IQ test that measured verbal intelligence - the Picture Vocabulary Test - while at middle and high school. They completed the IQ test again when they were between the ages of 18 and 26. The researchers found that - among both groups - the influence of parental behavior on child intelligence during adolescence and young adulthood was marginal and inconsistent. "Sensitivity analyses that focused only on monozygotic twins also revealed no consistent associations between parenting/family measures and verbal intelligence," they say, adding: "Taken together, the results of these statistical models indicate that family and parenting characteristics are not significant contributors to variation in IQ scores." Beaver notes that their findings challenge previous research indicating that parental actions influence a child's intelligence. "In reality," he says, "the parents who are more intelligent are doing these things and it is masking the genetic transformation of intelligence to their children."

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