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.
Overview

Added
March 7, 2026
Related situation
Audience
parent
Grade range
Grade 9 (Freshman)–Grade 12 (Senior)
Page kind
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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