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Children and Parents

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Focus on parenting skills, child's behavior, and family relationships ... children have significant stress, psychopathology, and poor parenting skills ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Children and Parents


1
Children and Parents
  • Why have children?
  • The parental role
  • Transition to parenthood
  • What children need
  • Socialization
  • parenting styles
  • class and race differences
  • impact of child care
  • Economics and childrens well being

2
Why have children?
  • Economic Model
  • Decision to have children based on
  • Income
  • Resource constraints
  • "Taste" for children
  • Parents may trade quantity for quality

3
Nine Values of Children(Hoffman and Hoffman)
  • 1. Primary group ties
  • 2. Stimulation and fun
  • 3. Expansion of self
  • 4. Adult status, identity
  • 5. Achievement, creativity
  • 6. Morality, social duty
  • 7. Power and influence
  • 8. Status, prestige
  • 9. Financial security

4
The Parental Role
  • Stages in most adult roles
  • Anticipation
  • Honeymoon
  • Plateau
  • Disengagement

5
Rossi -The Parent Role is Different
  • Acquired overnight
  • No anticipatory stage
  • No formal preparation
  • No clear disengagement
  • Irrevocable can't send them back

6
How Infants Changed Families(LaRossa and
LaRossa)
  • Changed conceptions of time
  • Traditionalized division of labor
  • Mother embraced role father distanced himself
  • Mothers did more "hands-on care
  • Mothers perceived infants as more competent.

7
What children need from parents
  • Material support
  • Emotional support
  • Structure/discipline
  • Values

8
Socialization
  • Primary socialization teaching the culture to
    young child
  • Involves
  • Language/communication
  • Behaviors
  • Norms
  • Values
  • Includes support and control

9
Parenting Styles(Baumrind)
  • Authoritative high support, consistent moderate
    discipline, parent as authority
  • Permissive high support, low discipline, parent
    as companion
  • Authoritarian low support, high discipline,
    parent in control

10
Traditional (Adult-Centered) Socialization
  • Goal Raise a competent adult.
  • Assumption Children naturally "wild" and must be
    controlled.
  • Values obedience, neatness, respect of peers,
    discipline oriented to behavior, unsponsored
    independence.
  • Style Authoritarian, "Parent Power
  • Similar to working class, natural growth

11
Developmental (Child-Centered) Socialization
  • Goal Develop child's potential.
  • Assumption child has unique capabilities
  • Values Self-direction, creativity,
    problem-solving, intellectual ability, sponsored
    independence, discipline oriented to motive.
  • Style authoritarian or permissive,
    participatory, democratic.
  • Similar to middle class, concerted
    cultivation, intensive mothering

12
Fathers and Socialization
  • Fathers interact differently with kids
  • More play rough and tumble
  • Influence is less direct or immediate
  • More direct involvement benefit to child
  • Direct involvement more difficult for dads
  • Little research on other adults as dads (e.g.
    lesbian partner, grandmother, etc.)

13
Good Dads Bad Dads2 modern father roles
  • 1. Involved Father
  • Originated in colonial times
  • Lost after industrialization
  • Considered voluntary
  • Personal and economic sacrifice
  • Emotionally rewarding
  • Still less involved than mother

14
2 modern father roles
  • 2. Absent Father
  • Results from voluntary fatherhood.
  • Supported by women's employment and welfare.
  • Related to men's job opportunities.
  • Less attached to children.
  • More common among Blacks.
  • Harmful to children, women, and men.

15
How Can We Increase Fathers Involvement?
  • Cultural change parenting as men's work
  • Individual change learning parental skills
  • Marital change wives' support and encouragement
  • Structural change incentives and opportunities
    for fathering responsive workplace

16
Child Care and Childrens DevelopmentOlder
toddlers, Preschoolers
  • Quality care has few or no negative effects.
  • Learn social skills earlier.
  • Learn nontraditional roles.
  • May be more assertive and aggressive.
  • May become peer-oriented earlier.

17
Child Care and Childrens DevelopmentInfants,
young toddlers
  • Findings are less conclusive
  • Probably no negative effects if hours are limited
  • Infants were less socially responsive, attentive,
    verbally expressive
  • May have implications for attachment

18
The Well-Being of American Children
  • Has well-being declined?
  • Compared with when?
  • Which children?

19
What is well-being?
  • Health care probably better overall, but not
    for working poor
  • Income rising standard of living, but mostly at
    the top
  • Intact families proportion is decreasing

20
Poor prospects for children with
  • An unmarried mother
  • A teen mother
  • A mother without a high school degree
  • A family income below the poverty line

21
Good prospects for children with
  • A married mother
  • A mother who was 26 or older when 1st child was
    born
  • A mother who completed college
  • family income 4 times the poverty rate

22
Children in the Middle
  • Downward drift since 1960s
  • More divorce, single parent families
  • More mothers working outside the home
  • Maybe less parental time
  • Moderate decline in economic status

23
Summary
  • People have children to enhance their lives
  • Transition to parenthood is very significant
  • Socialization increasingly child-centered,
    developmental
  • Fathers role significant, indirect
  • Voluntary notion of fatherhood
  • Child care has some effects on development
  • Mixed prospects for child well-being
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