Skip to main content

Moms, Even When Kids Reject Your Advice, It's Still Helping Them

Medically reviewed by Carmen Pope, BPharm. Last updated on May 27, 2024.

By Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, May 27, 2024 -- Does advising your teen sometimes feel like talking to the proverbial brick wall?

Don't fret: New research shows that even when your preteen or teen gives your advice a flat "no way," your counsel is probably having an impact.

It may simply be tucked away by your child, ready for use another day.

“The kids are at an age where they're maturing and wanting to make their own decisions," explained study lead author and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researcher Kelly Tu.

"Their immediate response may be resistance or reluctance, but the advice about how to reframe the problem, consider other explanations or think about what they are learning from the experience is sticking with them," Tu said in a university news release. "They may need time to process and evaluate it. Maybe they didn’t find it useful in that specific situation they were discussing. But perhaps they came across new experiences in middle school and now they have some strategies to pull from their toolbox because mom gave them different ways to think about academic challenges."

Tu is associate professor of human development and family studies at the university. Her team published the study in the May-June issue of the Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology.

The study focused on 100 mother-child pairs where the child was in the fifth grade. Tu said her team focused on that age (about 11) because it's often a tough time for kids socially and academically as they ready for the transition from elementary to middle school.

The mom-child pair was asked to spend five minutes talking over an academic problem the child recently had.

“We wanted to understand what's happening in actual conversations between parents and children," Tu said. "We focused on academic challenges such as difficulty understanding schoolwork, being bored in class or problems with time management because academic expectations and pressure start to increase during this age. We wanted to know what parents are telling their kids about how to manage these stressors and how the kids are responding."

As part of the study, each child and their teacher also completed a survey focused on how well the child was coping in school and their degree of social engagement. The survey was completed before and after the child's first year in middle school.

According to Tu, when a mother advises her child about tackling a specific academic issue, the child typically receives a response involving an "active" strategy to solve it.

“We did not find that parents told their kids to ignore the problem and not worry about it, as we sometimes see with peer problems," Tu said. "With academics, and especially around the transition to middle school, parents wanted their kids to try and address the challenge."

Three common pieces of advice that the moms gave:

To no parent's surprise, these pearls of wisdom were often met with dismissal or vague "whatevers" by the child -- an answer like "maybe" or "I don’t know."

That does not mean that your child isn't carefully thinking over your advice, Tu said. She said that in adolescence, many kids simply don't want to appear like they are leaning on moms for guidance anymore.

However, based on the reports from kids and their teachers, advice does seem to sink in and help children as they move forward.

Perhaps unexpectedly, kids who had rejected or seemed lukewarm about a mom's "cognitive reappraisal" advice actually tended to improve more at school than kids who embraced the advice, Tu's group found.

Why that is so isn't clear. According to Tu, it's possible that when a child accepts a mom's advice, she or he may simply be doing it to close down the conversation and move on.

In any case, giving kids a variety of advice on topics that matter to them seems key.

“One of the main takeaways from this study is the importance of providing kids with a wide range of suggestions they can apply in different situations, especially when youth are dealing with academic challenges," Tu said. "Even if they don't seem to be receptive in the moment, we are finding that some advice still has longer-term benefits."

Sources

  • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, news release, May 23, 2024

Disclaimer: Statistical data in medical articles provide general trends and do not pertain to individuals. Individual factors can vary greatly. Always seek personalized medical advice for individual healthcare decisions.

© 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Read this next

FDA Tells Vaccine Makers to Target New COVID Variant for Fall

FRIDAY, June 14, 2024 -- COVID vaccine makers will be advised to update their shots to target the KP.2 variant, an offshoot of the JN.1 variant that spread widely last winter, the...

Just 1 in 20 Animal Studies Yield Treatments That Make it to Humans

FRIDAY, June 14, 2024 -- Animal studies are often considered a first step in finding new drugs and treatments for human diseases, but a new review has discovered that precious few...

Swimming 'Microbots' Could Speed Meds to Lung Tumors, Early Study Suggests

FRIDAY, June 14, 2024 -- Scientists have developed microscopic robots capable of swimming through the lungs to deliver chemotherapy directly to lung cancer cells. In early...

More news resources

Subscribe to our newsletter

Whatever your topic of interest, subscribe to our newsletters to get the best of Drugs.com in your inbox.