No Big Deal, but This Researcher’s Theory Explains Everything About How Americans Parent
Last edited Sun Apr 14, 2013, 07:26 PM - Edit history (1)
Looking back at her research, Harkness can trace the history of how we got this way. During interviews with middle-class Boston parents in the 1980s, she and her colleagues kept hearing about the importance of special time or quality time: One-on-one time that stimulated the child and that revolved around his interests. Nearly every American parent mentioned it, she says. It was this essential thing that all parents seemed to think they should doand maybe they werent doing enough of it.
This seems obviously reasonable. I would likely say special time with ironic quotation marks, but I still feel pretty much the same way those parents did. How else would a halfway-decent parent feel? But when Harkness talked to other halfway-decent parents in other cultures, even other seemingly very similar Western cultures, they were oblivious to this nagging feeling. Harkness recalls that in the Netherlands, a father said, Well, on Saturday mornings, my wife sleeps late, I get up with the kids, and I take them to recycle the bottles and cans at the supermarket. That was their special, stimulating, child-directed time: recycling bottles and cans. Asked if an activity was developmentally meaningful, the Dutch parents would brush off the question as irrelevant or even nonsensical. Why think of every activity as having a developmental purpose?
What you notice reading these accounts is how much more intensivehow much more arousingAmerican parenting is. Harkness has characterized it as trying to push stimulation to the maximum without going over the edge into dysregulation of basic state control. This is true even if you think youre differentthat youre not like those other parents at the playground. Culture operates at a deeper level than any individual parenting choice. In a survey Harkness and her colleagues conducted of parents in Western cultures, the last question was, Whats the most important thing you can do for your childs development right now? The American parents almost to a person said, Stimulationstimulation is what my child needs. Interestingly, even the attachment parents, who were very adamant about being different in a lot of waysthey still gave the same answer. And all the parents meant a very particular sort of stimulation. The parents talked about themselves in almost curatorial terms: Theyd create a setting for intellectual growth. It went almost without saying that the actual stimulation came from the toys.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/how_babies_work/2013/04/10/parental_ethnotheories_and_how_parents_in_america_differ_from_parents_everywhere.html
Laelth
(32,017 posts)-Laelth
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)These are the two things that children should have.
closeupready
(29,503 posts)American parenting, or at least, I believe that too many children are raised poorly.
Yesterday, I passed by a group of early 20-somethings, spray-painting the exterior of a building. I assumed they had a permit, since it was right there in the open and was taking time, but I thought to myself, 'wow, this is how you are spending your life, doing graffiti?'
People are homeless and struggling to eat, and young people spend their lives lunching, smoking pot, graffiti/tagging structures, etc. Hardly the outcome JFK had in mind when he founded the Peace Corps, I'm sure.
Thanks for posting the interesting article.
silverweb
(16,402 posts)angstlessk
(11,862 posts)A mother had a a toddler and an infant..the toddler hit the infant..and the mother said and I quote "I will teach you to hit your (brother -sister) and she smacked the toddler...and for sure she was telling the truth..
She WAS teaching the toddler to hit...
Mojorabbit
(16,020 posts)yurbud
(39,405 posts)providing bulk time.
Wouldn't it be great if you could tell your boss you're going to be at work less but put in more "quality time"?
Fumesucker
(45,851 posts)Lower middle class and the poors aren't so hung up on "quality time", quite often they're more focused on things like feeding, clothing and housing the kid.