The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom about Children and Parenting

The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom about Children and Parenting

by Alfie Kohn
The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom about Children and Parenting

The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom about Children and Parenting

by Alfie Kohn

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Overview

Somehow, a set of deeply conservative assumptions about children -- what they're like and how they should be raised -- have congealed into the conventional wisdom in our society. Parents are accused of being both permissive and overprotective, unwilling to set limits and afraid to let their kids fail. Young people, meanwhile, are routinely described as entitled and narcissistic . . . among other unflattering adjectives.

In The Myth of the Spoiled Child, Alfie Kohn systematically debunks these beliefs -- not only challenging erroneous factual claims but also exposing the troubling ideology that underlies them. Complaints about pushover parents and coddled kids are hardly new, he shows, and there is no evidence that either phenomenon is especially widespread today -- let alone more common than in previous generations. Moreover, new research reveals that helicopter parenting is quite rare and, surprisingly, may do more good than harm when it does occur. The major threat to healthy child development, John argues, is posed by parenting that is too controlling rather than too indulgent.

With the same lively, contrarian style that marked his influential books about rewards, competition, and education, Kohn relies on a vast collection of social science data, as well as on logic and humor, to challenge assertions that appear with numbing regularity in the popular press. These include claims that young people suffer from inflated self-esteem; that they receive trophies, praise, and As too easily; and that they would benefit from more self-discipline and "grit." These conservative beliefs are often accepted without question, even by people who are politically liberal. Kohn's invitation to reexamine our assumptions is particularly timely, then; his book has the potential to change our culture's conversation about kids and the people who raise them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780738217253
Publisher: Hachette Books
Publication date: 03/25/2014
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 535 KB

About the Author

Alfie Kohn is the author of fourteen previous books, including Punished by Rewards, The Schools Our Children Deserve, and Unconditional Parenting. He lives in the Boston area.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

1 Permissive Parents, Coddled Kids, and Other Reliable Bogeymen 9

2 Parenting in Perspective 35

3 Overstating Overparenting 51

4 Getting Hit on the Head Lessons: Motivation, Failure, and the Outrage over Participation Trophies 75

5 The Underlying Values: Conditionality, Scarcity, and Deprivation 101

6 The Attack on Self-Esteem 119

7 Why Self-Discipline Is Overrated: A Closer Look at Grit, Marshmallows, and Control from Within 141

8 Raising Rebels 177

Notes 195

References 233

Index 261

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