The average expectable environment is not good enough: a response to Scarr
- PMID: 7693400
The average expectable environment is not good enough: a response to Scarr
Abstract
I take the position, contrary to Scarr's, that the details of socialization patterns are crucial to an understanding of normal and deviant development. Considerable evidence has accrued to justify the claim that what normal parents do or fail to do crucially affects their children's development. Research is cited to support the argument that better than "good enough" parenting optimizes the development of both normal and vulnerable children, and that parents' belief in their own effectiveness further enhances their caregiving, whereas causal attributions that assign responsibility for child outcomes to genetic factors that parents cannot change undermine parents' belief in their own effectiveness. The strong conclusions Scarr draws from heritability analyses to support her thesis that genotypes drive experiences overlook their inherent limitations.
Comment on
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Developmental theories for the 1990s: development and individual differences.Child Dev. 1992 Feb;63(1):1-19. Child Dev. 1992. PMID: 1343618 Review.
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