The Importance Of Influence On Children

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Influence is a word that can explain many things in today’s society and culture. Influence explains why people do the things they do. A child’s influence on how he or she perceives life will stay with them for the rest of their conscious existence. This essay is going to tackle the important question deeming from where that influence comes from. How much and how strong of an influence does a parent have on their child or children. Although children are influenced from the outside world as well, ultimately a child’s values, morals, spiritual awareness and ethics can strongly come from the parents and what they saw in their home while growing up. While planned parenting can be an essential means in physiologically and financially preparing the …show more content…

The child can be shy, outgoing, perceptive, or absent-minded, but those characteristics will be shown later in the child’s lifetime, also there are physical attributes that can and does manifests itself as the child develops from infancy on ward. Taking a look at a family, one may be able to perceive where the influence on the child or children are coming from, one maybe able to tell what types of characteristics the children or child has or will have as they continue to develop. Then one can observe the family to see where the dominance of these traits is stemming from. Ascertaining by the observation one can assume that the parents can think of someone in their family, if not they themselves, to answer that question. What about the influence a child receives after birth, if any, are strongly rooted or attained from their …show more content…

This process was the basis for the Attachment Theory which was formulated by a British psychiatrist John Bowlby, and was later elaborate on by his colleague Mary Ainsworth. This theory bottom lines the beginning of emotional development when a strong bond or tie binds a person to an intimate companion. In this case the mother at birth and the presence of the father during the birthing process, “Life Span Human Development 8e.” Correlating to this theory, by showing the child love, affection and nurture from birth and continuously throughout childhood, can have a positive effect on the child later on in life. Judith Rich Harris, in her book “The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do; Parents Matter Less Than You Think and Peers Matter More,” believes that the love a parent gives has no effect on the child later on in life. So far, to this day, studies shows contrary that if a parent shows love and support towards their child, that their outcome in later life and years will show or reflect the healthy and balanced foundation that the parents set for them from birth and during their most impressionable years as they developed and went through the transitional stages from juvenile to adulthood. Some may interject that parents are seldom to be the kind of parent their children need them to be, but nobody knows how a

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