Larzelere
and Straus Debate
June, 1999
A summary of Larzelere's
presentation in a debate with Straus about spanking. This debate was
held at a conference of the National Foundation for Family Research
and Education at Banff in Alberta, Canada.
Summary
This presentation summarizes the
current scientific basis for a balanced middle position on child
effects of nonabusive spanking by parents. There have been two major
problems in research on parental disciplinary responses in general
and spanking in particular. The first is the tendency to polarize
viewpoints into all-good vs. all-bad options, rather than
differentiating effective from counterproductive ways to use a wide
range of disciplinary tactics. For example, cognitive developmental
and clinical behavioral viewpoints tend to contradict each other on
optimal disciplinary responses, even though they complement each
other nicely on most other issues about parental discipline. The
second problem concerns the causal direction of associations between
spanking and child behavior. Even longitudinal correlations often
fail to isolate the effects of spanking on subsequent child
misbehavior. The original level of child misbehavior may have caused
both the original spanking frequency and the subsequent child
problems. This possibility is consistent with the fact that
alternative disciplinary responses are more often associated with
more detrimental child outcomes than is nonabusive spanking, compared
to the reverse.
There have been 13 published
studies and 3 unpublished studies capable of isolating the effects of
parental spanking on child outcomes. Most of them (12 of 16) have
found beneficial child outcomes of spanking under some important
circumstances. Such beneficial outcomes are mostly limited to the use
of nonabusive spanking to back up milder disciplinary tactics with 2-
to 6-year-old children by loving, sober parents who are in control of
their anger. When parents use spanking primarily to back up milder
disciplinary responses, such as reasoning or time out, then those
milder tactics become more effective disciplinary tactics by
themselves. In this way, parents can work themselves out of the need
to use spanking without compromising their disciplinary
effectiveness. Beneficial outcomes have included reductions in
noncompliance, fighting, antisocial behavior, emotional problems, and
hostility.
In contrast, 4 of the 16 causally
conclusive studies found only detrimental child outcomes of
nonabusive spanking. The detrimental outcomes occurred almost
entirely for children over 6 years old. The detrimental outcomes tend
to be small, and do not apply to subgroups that view spanking as more
appropriate and loving (e.g., African-Americans and conservative
Protestants). Further, a replication of the best study found
identical small detrimental child outcomes for all four alternative
disciplinary responses for 6- to 9-year-olds available from the
interview: grounding, sending the child to a room, removing
privileges, and taking away an allowance. Whatever accounts for this
small detrimental child effect, it does not seem to be unique to
spanking, but may reflect overly frequent uses of any negative
consequence (rejecting manner?, impulsive rather than loving
discipline?, insufficient discussion?).
In conclusion, the current
scientific evidence suggests that some kind of balanced middle
position on spanking is preferable to either of the polarized
extremes. Parents should resort to the mildest disciplinary tactic
they think will be effective, and be open to mutually acceptable
compromises negotiated by their children. But they should back up
reasoning and time out when necessary, whether with a nonabusive
spanking (appropriate only near the ages of 2 to 6) or some
alternative (e.g., grounding). Parenting experts need to expand
effective nonabusive disciplinary options for parents, not
prematurely restrict them.
Contact information for Robert E.
Larzelere
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