The child code Understanding your child's unique nature for happier, more effective parenting

Danielle M. Dick

Book - 2021

"A provocative, science-based approach to parenting centered on a child's unique genetic 'code,' from an award-winning developmental psychology professor and researcher"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Avery, an imprint of Penguin Random House [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Danielle M. Dick (author)
Physical Description
viii, 260 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593192252
  • Author's Note
  • Introduction Understanding the Child Code
  • Part 1. Everything You Need to Know About the Science of Human Behavior (and Nothing More)
  • Chapter 1. Nature versus Nurture: The Science Is In
  • Chapter 2. It's Complicated: The Ways That Genes Influence Our Lives
  • Part 2. Building Blocks
  • Chapter 3. Getting to Know Your Child: "The Big Three" Dimensions of Temperament
  • Chapter 4. Extraversion: The "Ex" Factor
  • Chapter 5. Emotionality: The "Em" Factor
  • Chapter 6. Effortful Control: The "Ef" Factor
  • Chapter 7. Beyond You and Your Child: Predispositions and Partners
  • Chapter 8. When to Worry, What to Do
  • Chapter 9. Putting It All Together: A New Approach to Parenting
  • But Wait, There's More!
  • Acknowledgments
  • Resources and Recommended Reading
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Dick (psychology, Virginia Commonwealth Univ.) draws on her experience as both a parent and an expert in genetics and child behavior. Here she asserts that answer to the question of nurture vs. nature is "both/and" and that nature's influence has been underplayed. "Genes place a leash on environmental influence, but it's an elastic leash," she writes. Readers learn how genetic code shapes development, personality, behavior, and interaction. Dick contends that children respond to their environment and their parents based on their unique temperaments, and the resulting complex behaviors are based on the combination of hundreds, perhaps thousands of genes. Dick's child-rearing strategies are based on "the three E's" of temperament: extraversion, emotionality, and effortful control. The book explores mental illness (e.g., anxiety, depression, oppositional defiant disorder, ADHD) in a final section; none of it deals specifically with autism, which seems like an oversight. VERDICT There's much to glean from this scientifically informed tome.

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