Sociology 315: Foundations of Social Welfare

Fall 2011

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Different child-rearing practices

(based on Annette Lareau's research)

 

 
Child-rearing practices
 
'Concerted cultivation'
'Accomplishment of natural growth'
Key elements
  • Parent activly fosters and assesses child's talents, opinions, and skills
  • Parent cares for child and allows child to grow
Organization of daily life
  • Multiple child leisure activities orchestrated by adults
  • 'Hanging out,' particularly with kin, by child
Language use
  • Reasoning/directives
  • Child contestation of adult statements
  • Extended negotiations between parents and child
  • Directives
  • Rare questioning or challenging of adults by child
  • General acceptance by child of directives
Interventions in institutions
  • Criticisms and interventions on behalf of child
  • Training of child to take on this role
  • Dependence on institutions
  • Sense of powerlessness and frustration
  • Conflict between child-rearing practices at home and at school
Consequences
  • Emerging sense of entitlement on the part of the child
  • Emering sense of constraint on the part of the child
Time and money
  • Constant discussions of finances, inability to pay for 'extras';
  • Attending events parent/teacher conferences, etc., and getting off work
  • Money may rarely be discussed (but is usually available when needed);
  • The right job lets parents be more flexible to attend children's events, participate/coach, etc.
     
  • Invisible privilege (e.g., 'human capital,' team sports, prioritizing, competition, dealing with adults)
  • 'Cumulative advantage' (early start on some of these skills, small early differences, can widen over time)

Garrett vs Tyrec vs Katie

  • Parental involvement
  • Upper and middle-class 'micromanagement' of kids' time, activity choices
  • Working class--less interest in being involved, activites seen as less consequential, getting kids organized for the mundane daily activities is time-consuming
  • Cultivation vs constraint
  • Financial considerations (e.g., Tyrec and football)
  • Organized activities (Garrett vs Katie, who sings in two choirs, vs Tyrec, who tried football)
  • Time budgets--how differently to poor/middle class parents spend their time? How is this affected by household budgets (transportation, shopping, necessary errands, health care, bank, etc.)?
  • Parents in household (underlying causes behind single parent status)??
  • Kids' behavior around the house vs with peers
  • Importance of other family members, extended and nuclear (and entangling alliances)
  • Public assistance, the work of getting it
  • Food resources, monthly eating cycles
  • Homework assistance (how to 'help')?
  • Television watching
  • Poverty is work (housing issues, laundry, food, transportation, health care ....), chaos (the whole fiasco the Brindles go through with Jenna, her health, moving to Florida, eviction, etc.)
  • Mental health, depression
  • . . . . . the importance?

 

Harold and Billy

  • Use of language, reasoning
  • Behavior at school and home
  • Questioning authority (school, the doctor . . . . welfare?)
  • Who's responsible for child's education?
  • Trust in institutions (Billy, his mom, and CPS)
  • autonomy around the house, control over leisure time
  • 'code of the street'
  • institutions function in ways that 'confer advantages upon middle class children'--what does she mean?
  • Bureaucracies, 'ideal types,' bureaucrats . . . . . whose values are reflected?
  • Human capital impllications?

Summing up

 

 

Annette Lareau. 2003. Unequal Childhoods. Berkeley: University of California Press (p 30).

 

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