Blog
01/18/2025
Social Connection On Child Development
Reviewed by: Julie Potet and Lisa Armus Jan 31, 2025
We aren’t meant to go through life alone. Healthy relationships and community support are vital for lifelong wellness, starting in childhood. Social connections are essential to healthy development, physically and emotionally. Kids learn by example, so witnessing positive relationships aids their emotional and cognitive growth. As children grow, their social networks change, but each stage requires specific mental and behavioral needs to be met through socialization.
Infancy
Social interaction is closely related to emotional development in infancy. At this age, your baby’s primary connections to the outside world are through you, their primary caregivers. The individuals in an infant’s home who care for them, provide food, water, and shelter, and interact daily meet these socialization needs between birth and twelve months. When given adequate nurturing, babies will develop trust and love for their caregivers or develop mistrust and indifference if not. During this stage, healthy social growth is about attachment and bonding between parent and child.
Without positive bonding experiences, a child’s brain pathways for normal relational experiences can be lost. Case studies of children with minimal human contact in early years showed a severe lack of emotional development due to the absence of love, language, and attention. Research shows that children’s ability to maintain a healthy relationship depends on their early caregivers’ care and treatment.
A lack of social connection can hinder a child’s emotional and physical brain development. The same research shows that neglect or extremely insecure attachment early on can lead to reduced growth in the left hemisphere, increasing the risk of depression in children. They may also exhibit increased limbic system sensitivity, leading to anxiety disorders and reduced hippocampus growth, contributing to learning and memory impairments.
Parents often ask, “How can I intentionally bond with my baby?” Fortunately, creating positive interactions during this time is simple. Responding to cues for food, diaper changes, and sleep all help build that bond. Other tips for attachment and bonding include singing, cuddling, clapping, playing, tummy time, kangaroo care (skin-to-skin contact), soothing crying, reading, eye contact, holding, babywearing, and providing good nutrition.
Early Childhood
Infants’ need for social connections is met through bonding with primary caregivers. However, young children begin to create relationships outside their families. Interacting with peers through daycare, preschool, play groups, or other events helps children mature their social interaction skills.
A common phrase among child therapists is, “Adults Talk, Kids Play.” In a nutshell, children cannot always articulate their thoughts, feelings, and experiences, but they can express them through play. It is a powerful tool for learning, engagement, and growth.
At first, young children engage in parallel play, playing side by side without interaction. Then, they move to cooperative play, interacting in small groups with shared activities like symbolic play (e.g., cooking, talking on the phone, playing house). This starts in toddlerhood and peaks between ages four and five. As they develop socially, they enter “rough and tumble play,” which includes racing, climbing, wrestling, and other competitive games. This stage helps them learn to take turns and follow simple group rules.
In early childhood, peers will start to identify with each other as friends. However, “friendship” is still a concrete, basic relationship. At this stage, it only involves sharing toys and playing together rather than the empathy and support qualities that adolescents and adults develop. However, these early friendships are still important. Paul Schwartz, a psychology and child behavior expert, emphasized the benefits of childhood friendship by stating,
“Friendships contribute significantly to the development of social skills, such as being sensitive to another’s viewpoints, learning the rules of conversation, and age-appropriate behaviors. More than half the children referred for emotional behavioral problems have no friends or find difficulty interacting with peers. Friends also have a powerful influence on a child’s positive and negative school performance and may also help to encourage or discourage deviant behaviors. Compared to children who lack friends, children with ‘good’ friends have higher self-esteem, act more socially, can cope with life stresses and transitions, and are also less victimized by peers.”
Even preschool friendships help develop social and emotional skills, increase belonging, and decrease stress. We must recognize the benefits of connecting socially in early childhood. Here are ways parents can help their little ones develop positive, healthy relationships:
- Model good friendship skills.
- Encourage your child’s important friendships.
- Set up playdates.
- Respect your child’s personality and interests.
- Emphasize the importance of staying connected.
- Ask about your child’s friends at school and daycare.
- Help your child develop problem-solving and conflict-resolution skills.
- Model empathy, compassion, and respect for kids.
- Encourage your child to start new friendships and maintain existing ones.
- Talk with your child at the appropriate time about when to end a friendship and how to do so respectfully.
- Discuss bullying and kindness.
Talking with your child about becoming a good friend will lead to more good friends. The skills learned in early childhood are important for current and future relationships.
Adolescence
As children transition to adolescence, they spend less time with their parents and siblings and more in social environments. Consequently, their friendships with peers will be foundational components of their overall well-being and play a prominent role in shaping their future interactions throughout life.
When teenagers have healthy friendships, they can truly reap the benefits. Positive friendships provide youth with support, companionship, and a sense of belonging and help develop social skills. Adolescents learn to cooperate, communicate, resolve conflicts, and resist negative peer pressure.
Positive adolescent friendships, including romantic ones, can lay the groundwork for successful adult relationships. Your kids are learning to make, maintain, and end relationships while practicing honesty, compassion, and trustworthiness. Teens with supportive friends do well in school and handle life’s challenges better. During tough times, peer relationships are crucial, providing belonging and relief from depression, anxiety, and stress. Closeness in friendships also boosts resilience.
Adolescence is a period of rapid change. Kids’ bodies are growing and changing, developing socially and emotionally. Friendships become more complex as teenagers view them more abstractly through an exchange of “give and take” as a true social support system emerges. For girls and boys, friendships in this stage are more emotionally involved than just a few years ago. Because of this, peer relationships tend to be a common source of stress and anxiety.
Peer pressure can negatively impact individuals, convincing your child to try smoking or drinking. Here are tips, adapted from Cleveland Clinic researchers, to reduce the negative influences of peer pressure on teenagers’ social interactions:
- Encourage open and honest communication to create a strong bond with your child.
- Discuss the negative impact of peer pressure with your child so they can say no and resist negative influences.
- Reinforce your family’s values.
- Teach your child the importance of being assertive when necessary.
- Give your teen space to breathe. Don’t be a hovering parent watching their every move. Don’t expect them to do exactly as you say. Expecting perfection sets them up to fail.
- Instead of just telling your teenager what to do, try to listen first and understand their perspective.
- Implement discipline, structure, boundaries, and consequences for negative actions or harmful behaviors.
One of the best things you can do for your child’s social connections in adolescence is to foster and encourage your teen’s abilities, strengths, identity, and self-esteem. This will help them resist peer influences. A positive self-image is vital for positive relationships as your child transitions into adulthood. Here are some practical ways to build your teenager’s self-esteem:
- Encourage your child daily. Recognize their achievements, not just mistakes. Affirm them frequently! Identifying their talents will help your teenager focus on their strengths.
- Give constructive criticism. Feedback is essential to growth. Be willing to have tough conversations and try to do so gracefully.
- Allow your teen to make mistakes. Overprotection or making decisions for them can be seen as a lack of faith in their abilities and won’t help their confidence grow. The best lessons are learned through failure. The safest time and place to fail is while they’re still under your care.
- Initiate conversations about self-esteem, identity, worth, self-image, and importance.
Dr. Bruce Perry, a child psychiatrist, summed it up best in a study: “The more healthy relationships a child has, the more likely he will be to recover from trauma and thrive. Relationships are the agents of change and the most powerful therapy is human love.”
Encouraging social connections is crucial for your child’s well-being and mental health. Loving relationships are powerful in a child’s life, and as parents, we must remember that this love begins at home.
TAGS: All For Kids
Sources:
https://www.mentalhelp.net/articles/infancy-emotional-and-social-development-social-connections/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5330336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5330336/#CIT0006
https://raisingchildren.net.au/preschoolers/play-learning/active-play/rough-play-guide
https://hvparent.com/importance-of-friendship
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/12942-fostering-a-positive-self-image
https://www.brightfutures.org/mentalhealth/pdf/06BFMHAdolescence.pdf