Family Influences on Adolescents’ Selfbeliefs: The Role of Parenting Styles and Attachment
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61173/z0pvqm68Keywords:
Self-efficacy, self-esteem, adolescent development, parenting stylesAbstract
This review looks at what research in psychology has found about the how different parenting styles affect the self-belief of the adolescent. Research has found that confidence and self-esteem of the adolescent is enhanced when parenting is warm and supportive. On the other hand, negative behaviors like rejection or imposing control have been linked to a decline, in these aspects of self perception. In addition, attachments determines how adolescents perceive their own value and identity through interactions with their parents during their growth. Individual characteristics including resilience levels and the array of active and cognitive coping strategies adolescents possess subsequently mediate the relationship between external influences and developmental outcomes, thereby underscoring the active agency of the adolescent rather than the view of adolescents as inert recipients of conditions such as parenting styles. Consequently, schools ought to implement programs designed to strengthen nurturing behaviors and cultivate secure attachment bonds, while parental units should adopt strategies that enhance self-regard and self-efficacy among adolescents. Future scholarship must extend beyond cross-sectional measurements and reliance on retrospective self-reports, investigations should systematically assess differential paternal versus maternal influences, examine how cultural context and digital environments mediate familial transmission processes, and account for the modalities through which technological engagement reciprocally shapes emotional development. This review underscores the pivotal role of family for adolescents’ mental health trajectories and articulates empirically derived, pragmatically oriented recommendations for adults seeking to amplify psychosocial growth in youth populations.