Gender Differences in Parenting Styles and Effects on the ParentChild Relationship 2025

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Parents provide children with their first lessons about gender. Possible ways that parents might influence childrens gender development include role modeling and encouraging different behaviours and activities in sons and daughters.
Mothers are far more likely than fathers to describe themselves as overprotective and to say they give in to their children too quickly. Among parents of children younger than 18, about half of mothers (51%) say they are the type of parent who tends to be overprotective, compared with 38% of fathers.
The findings suggest that gender does influence parenting modes, with mothers tending to adopt authoritative parenting styles, while fathers tend to favor authoritarian or permissive styles.
Families characterized by incongruent gender role attitudes across family members will have higher levels of marital, parent-child, and sibling conflict compared to families characterized by congruent gender role attitudes across family members.
This means promoting and supporting the holistic development, well-being and positive gender socialization of the child throughout their life course, through parenting interactions, behaviours, emotions, knowledge, beliefs, attitudes and practices.
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Whilst parents may not intend to treat their sons and daughters differently, research shows that they do. Sons appear to get preferential treatment in that they receive more helpful praise, more time is invested in them, and their abilities are often thought of in higher regard.
Boys are referred to as funny, playful and loving, while girls are viewed as argumentative, manipulative and serious. And one in five moms of sons and daughters admit to letting their sons get away with more -- turning a blind eye to a behavior in boys for which they would reprimand girls.
While family and social stress increase the chances of depression in children, a negative parenting style means children face family and social anxiety. Due to the high level of hostile parenting and low level of positive parenting, they experience stress, peer pressure, and social and family relationship problems.

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