ADS

jeudi 27 mars 2014

Very Helpful Parenting Books

By Leanna Rae Scott


One important factor of the most helpful parenting books possible is that they are based substantially on the writers' personal experience and not just on their formal education or their professional advice-giving experience. Formal education is no doubt a bonus for writers of parenting books, but it isn't as crucial as personal experience in actually using and assessing many parenting techniques when raising their own children.

Also, it's important for these writers to be able to analyze why certain techniques work and why others don't. Writers who are able to do this on a personal basis need to actually raise some of their own kids. (Logically, it makes sense that writers who raise more of their own children actually have a chance of learning more than writers who have fewer children.)

As most savvy parents know, most parenting book authors seem to be physicians. Many of them view their own parenting expertise (which seems to be gained more from advising other parents in their practices than from personal parenting) as being superior to that of the average parent. Such doctors who think their own professional expertise outweighs that of even vastly experienced parents tend to approach their dispensing of advice with the attitude of superiority, and with the self-perceived status of expert.

Many of these professional parenting experts, for example, tell other parents, with confidence, that tantrums are a normal, natural, and highly unavoidable part of raising kids. However, thousands and perhaps millions of average parents know different from their own personal experience.

This points out a problem that expert parent advisors often have: their formal education often steers them wrong on such issues as temper-tantrum inevitability. Their university courses often give them faulty, handed-down concepts such as this from past generations of expert scholars. This is why it's so important for people who are writing parenting books to first gain a reasonable level of personal parenting experience.




About the Author:



0 comments:

Enregistrer un commentaire