You are directly assigning the value 1 to the property document.forms[0].elements['ParentSelect'], whereas you presumably mean to change the value of the element, which would be achieved like this:
document.forms[0].elements['ParentSelect'].value = 1
I agree with some of the other comments concerning the lack of valid HTML strucutre, and I would add that if you are going to reference the field via document.forms[0], you may as well give the field an id property so you can simply use 'document.getElementById` so your code works regardless of the other forms on the page. Anyway, using your method, here is the complete code:
<form>
<input type="hidden" name="ParentSelect" value="0" />
<select class="style" onchange="document.forms[0].elements['ParentSelect'].value=1" >
<option value="1">Value 1</option>
<option value="2">Value 2</option>
</select>
</form>
Using an id instead:
<form>
<input id="parentSelect" type="hidden" name="ParentSelect" value="0" />
<select class="style" onchange="var e = document.getElementById('parentSelect'); if (e) e.value=1;" >
<option value="1">Value 1</option>
<option value="2">Value 2</option>
</select>
</form>