When Your Kid’s Best Friend Is a Great Big Problem: New Research for Thai Parents on Navigating Teen Peer Influence
A growing body of research suggests that as children become teenagers, their friends exert a powerful pull on daily choices, values, and even long-term paths—often more than well-meaning parental guidance. This isn’t a critique of Thai parenting norms, but a reminder that adolescence is a social, identity-building journey in which peers become central. The latest conversations in education and child psychology emphasize that the most effective approach isn’t to ban friends or to rely on constant lectures. Instead, it’s about strengthening the family base, modeling core values in everyday life, and guiding teens to make thoughtful choices while they figure out who they want to become. For Thai families, where family harmony, respect, and community often sit at the center of daily life, these ideas resonate with familiar traditions even as they challenge newer parenting anxieties around autonomy, safety, and social belonging.