Got advice? Here's how to get teens to listen | University of California

A study from UC Riverside researchers found teens will appreciate parents’ unsolicited advice, but only if the parent is supportive of their teens’ autonomy.

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Ajouté le

7 mars 2026

Situation associée

Public

parent

Niveaux scolaires

9e année (3e)–12e année (Terminale)

Type de page

Article

Introduction

How to Make Teens Listen to Unsolicited Advice

  • Core Finding: Teens and "emerging adults" (ages 18–25) are receptive to unsolicited parental advice only if they perceive their parents as supportive of their autonomy.
  • Defining Autonomy Support: Parents support autonomy by:
    • Providing clear, enforced guidelines and rules.
    • Participating in activities that interest their children.
    • Validating their child’s feelings.
    • Encouraging exploration of their child's unique interests and identity.
  • Communication Pitfalls: Dismissive phrases like "Because I said so," "get over it," or "it’s not a big deal" cause teens to build emotional walls, rendering advice ineffective.
  • Study Methodology:
    • Published in the journal Emerging Adulthood (December).
    • Sample size: 194 participants aged 18–25.
    • Demographic diversity: The study was notable for being overwhelmingly non-white (38.3% Asian, 33.2% Latino, 10.4% multiracial, 6.7% Middle Eastern, 4.7% Black, 4.7% white), increasing the generalizability of the results.
  • Why It Matters: When parents are perceived as not understanding their child, the child assumes the advice is inapplicable. Conversely, autonomy-supporting parents are better at gauging when and how to offer support effectively.
  • Long-term Impact: Autonomy support fosters greater self-efficacy ("I got this") and sets the stage for healthy transitions into later adulthood.

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