publication date: Mar 24, 2010
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author/source: Lesley Lodge
nurtureshock, a much-talked about book by
Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman, is sub-titled
Why everything we think about raising our children is wrong - and does indeed contain a whole set of
thought-provoking propositions aimed at
overturning a lot of our deeply held views on
bringing up our children. When you
start reading it, you'll probably
not agree with anything it suggests. And when you
finish reading it, you'll still not agree with
everything it says. But I'm willing to bet you will
find yourself surprised to be thinking, "yes, that does make sense" and "Ah, maybe that's explains my son/daughter's behaviour..."
nurtureshock is American and written in the
easy-to-read but sometimes irritating
self-help book style – complete with trendy lowercase title – but
bear with it. Each proposition is
backed up not just with
real-life examples but also with an impressive amount of
factual research, all referenced in detail. I guarantee that at least some of its
radical new thinking will make you look again at the
basic assumptions about how we bring up our children. The book doesn't just criticise
existing approaches, in many cases it also
suggests more effective ones.
The
first challenge the book throws out is to possibly the most
mainstream of our modern attitudes – the assumption that
praise is supportive for children,
reinforces their confidence and
promotes better performance. This book quotes
study after study which show that
blanket praising of children's work does
not improve grades and sometimes acts as a
disincentive. Instead, the book proposes
praising a child's effort rather than the result. This, it suggests, does work.
The
advent of TV, computers etc have led to a
situation where kids now get on average
at least an hour's less sleep, per night, than kids did
30 years ago. Studies in the book show the
critical importance of this sleep loss on children's
developing brains and the adverse effects that it has on
performance, moods and even weight gain.
Re-introducing that lost hour could bring some
really dramatic benefits for children and adolescents alike.
Other widely held
beliefs and the
challenges this book makes are:
- That white, liberally-minded parents who believe they are naturally instilling concepts of racial equality in their children are in fact failing to do so because they shy away from talking explicitly about race
- That gifted and talented programmes are not always picking the "right" children
- Kids don't lie out of badness but because they learn to from their parents - the danger is that children's experiments with lying can go unchecked and lying, over and above "white lies", can become entrenched.
- That sibling rivalry is about competing for parental affection - the book suggests that actually the level of sibling rivalry depends more on how well the older sibling has learnt to interact with his/her best friend.
- Teenagers' arguments with parents aren't destructive but constructive – teens' brains have to think through ideas about what's risky or dangerous – they simply don't have the learnt experience of adults, so arguing is testing things out.
- Being disciplined is ultimately more important than being smart - self-control can be taught.
- Why modern parenting has failed to result in kinder, gentler kids
- Why early language development in babies is not a guaranteed advantage
Overall, though, while
nurtureshock probably won't convert you to all its
radical ideas, having a closer look at the
apparent contradictions it mentions can bring about a deeper kind of
understanding – children are quite
mysterious and this book will
open your mind to more of their
possibilities.
And as for me, did I find
any answers? Well, I'd definitely do a couple of things differently - I'd keep
TVs out of their bedrooms before 14 years and I'd take up the
suggesting of praising effort rather than performance. And I do feel a reassured that
sibling rivalry is pretty much normal.
Published by
Ebury Press, nurtureshock is available to order from
Amazon by clicking the link below:
Nurtureshock: Why Everything We Thought About Children is Wrong