Welcome to 32nd and Chestnut...
We'll document the strangeness of college life, try to translate our experience for diverse readers, and chronicle what it means to be a college student during these crazy days of economic turmoil and political battle.
That's it for now; I have to go an play Spore.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Overprotective Parents.
Response to "Parents and Grades"
The Child Trap
Parenting: Can There be too Much?
The article, "The Child Trap," describes a new emergency that exists in today's world. This emergency is that of Over-Parenting. This article claims that the parents who show their children too much attention are actually hurting their kids. The article claims that if a parent was to do too much for their kids that their kids wouldn't preform well in the real world. I have seen many examples of this right here at Drexel. I know of one student that was so homesick that she decided that she wanted to move out and head back home. She would rather commute to school. The problem occurs after she graduates and lands a job. Will she still live at home? There comes a time when you need to be independent and experience life on your own terms. The post entitled, "Over-parenting an Emergency," explains a different effect. He explains that his parents tried to shelter him too, and filled his schedule, so that he would have little time to experiment with cigarettes, drugs and parties. He believes that as he got older he was more curious than a child who experienced less parenting and lived somewhat of an average life. For the most part, I agree with what he had to say, but he said that reverse-psychology plays a role from excessive parenting. I disagree, I think a parent should explain why partying and drugs are bad, and explain the consequences so that the child wouldn’t be tempted to even try.
Viva la Resistance
The portrait of the modern, upper-middle class American family described in The New Yorker's article, "The Child Trap," has never been seen by my eyes. The idea that a parent has enough time in a day to monitor every aspect of a child's time is farce in my experience. That being said, I can find at least three of the traits described as "helicopter parenting" in so many of the people I know from high school. One prime example is a good friend of mine. Ever since he and I were in middle school, his breaks from school were all booked by his mother. The two of them went just about anywhere you could think. He spent summers in Greece, went to a french camp in Quebec, and when he was not globe trotting, every day at home had hours devoted to piano practice. The upside, from my point of view, and the perspective of the rest of our friends, was that he could play just about any song on the piano, including all of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody, perfectly. The downside is that, even over his first winter break in college, he will be in Taiwan, and unable to share in experiences that the rest of us will.
The downside to all the pressure his mother places on him is that when there are bursts from the pressure, it is considerable. The article's assertion that it's impossible to smoke pot at lacrosse practice is probably true, but that does not mean that sending your kid to french camp won't introduce him, inadvertently, to cigarettes.
Hanoud4 makes a similar argument in her post, focusing on a friend of hers, who's friends are scrutinized for their worthiness to be associated with their precious. The mark of an ideal parent, according to Hanoud4 is engaging with other people on a social basis and, for all intents and purposes, relaxing. I've heard of a number of students who are pushed and pressured by their parents much in the same way as Hanoud4's friend, and once being accepted to a university that their parents wanted them at, in a major also chosen by their parents, it's like a bullet hitting a brick wall. The prodigies from high school all seem to fall prey to the sheer explosion of options available to them in college. For the first time, these teenagers have the option of choosing for themselves, and without the brackets of their parents, it's usually the wrong ones.
Children hand-reared by their parents are going to be in the hole when the get to college, unless they subvert their parent's grasp on their lives. Hanoud4's friend seems to be doing just that, and it's one thing to lie to your parents, but under the circumstances I find no fault with her, only the parents. In fact, I'm happy for this young girl, because she recognized that what her parents wanted for her and what she wanted were different, and acted on it. If she hadn't, things would have most certainly been different, and her parent's careful manipulation of her life may have ended only when they died.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Over-parenting an Emergency
Response to Crazy Kids
Overbearing parents do not benefit children.
overparenting overburden
Will this get you into MIT?
My friend never seems happy or relaxed, rather always stressing over things and complaining about making her practices. This reveals that she has no love or passion for the extracurricular activities she’s involved in. This surely fools the college admissions officers, who are swayed to believe this individual is well-rounded and has many interests with addition to excelling in academics. Overparenting seems to create artificial robots that religiously follow their parent’s selfish wishes and orders. The parents are not thinking on how to improve of the world, but concentrate on how to make their children “the best” and “top of the line.” How is the future going to be when the managers and top leaders in companies are led by selfish, unmotivated men and women?
Friday, November 21, 2008
In Response to: Face it, My mom...
Response to Helicopter Parents Can't Really Fly
The Child Trap
The Child Trap
The Child Trap
The Child Trap
Children to Robots
As indicated in the reading, from preschool forward, children are forced to begin learning about math and reading and I have seen the truth in this with my younger cousins who are in elementary school. The amount of work they receive as elementary school students is completely unreasonable because children should be given a chance to live and enjoy their lives. Children have turned into robots that parents and schools train to attain the goal of getting into college. The true meaning of obtaining an education has diminished to a simple phrase, “making a lot of money.” The disturbing truth that, “… fifty-five per cent of American men between the ages of eighteen and twenty-four, and fourteen per cent between the ages of twenty-five and thirty-four, live with their parents,” shows how dependent children are on their parents. This trend toward dependent adults is creating a population of “wimps” that do not have the leadership to make it on their own. Another important effect of over-parenting is that it prevents children from developing courage, outside-the-box thinking, and independence which are all important in developing into an adult.
I have seen with my own eyes this sheltering of children with in my own family and it is difficult to judge where to draw the line between fawning over your child and just caring very dearly. My aunt and uncle recently had a baby boy that they are extremely protective over. They never let him wander around the house without someone behind him to make sure he doesn’t fall. Their older child was never allowed to go out to hang out with friends or watch rated R movies. When college applications came around, my aunt and uncle basically decided where my cousin was going to go to college and they even completed the application for him. They sheltered their kids so much that they are deficient in their social skills and their ability to be independent.
Response to "The Effect of Cell Phones on Overparenting"
Though I never really thought about it before, it is true, cell phones provide a way for parents to check up on their kids whenever they choose. For the longest time I had wanted a cell phone, and I had bugged my parents to get me one. Finally, when I got my drivers license, they gave in. At the time I didn't read too much into it. I figured it was probably a reward for passing my test, or supposed to used in an emergency, something like that. As I ventured out on my own, though, I started getting calls from my mom, asking me how I was and where I was. Giving me a cell phone had just been a ploy to keep track of me.
Response To Helicopter Mom
Overparenting: A Trend Among Parents
I spent a part of my childhood in East Asia as mentioned in the article and I must say overparenting is pretty serious there. The sole purpose of childhood is education and parents do everything in their power to make their children study every single moment. This results in academic days that begins at 7 a.m. and ends at 11 p.m. Private tutoring institutions grew so big that the government tried to regulate them by prohibiting them to work after 10 p.m., but the institutions are so large that they just pay the fee and work pretty much around the clock. While I was walking around the city around midnight I saw a big bus bringing students from the school to the institution. Since I was going to school in America I could see how serious the problem was. However, the irony is that the parents do not really believe in the system. The parents are just scared that their kids will fall behind in school. I believe the parents are not even aware of some of the scientific reasons described in the article, and the one reason they follow the trend of overparenting is just because it's a "trend".
Parents and Grades
While reading "The Child Trap", I found myself agreeing with the author on almost every point, and thinking, "I know people like that." Several of my friends in high school graduated at the very top of the class, the top five to be specific. If you ask any one of them why they did it, the unanimous response would be something like, "My parents would kill me if I didn't." They did not push themselves to the top because they genuinely wanted to be the best. They were pushed to achieve. Their over-controlling parents regimented their lives, by forcing them to take AP level classes in every subject and drowning them in extracurriculars. Two of our top five were not allowed to leave the house, watch TV, or play video games on weekdays. A friend of mine (a member of this group) once told me that she hated school more than anything, yet she gave a speech at graduation. This kind of parenting doesn't foster curiosity, or a love of learning. Sure, it may make them look better on paper; however, it doesn't make them happier, and that is what's truly important.
In response to "Send Me All Your Grades by E-Mail
SAT Scores Not High Enough? See a Doctor!
One of the topics that I experienced firsthand in highschool was the fad of going to the pediatrician and having him or her diagnose you with ADD just because you were having trouble concentrating in school(but really because you had a lack of motivation and knew that if you were diagnosed with ADD you would get extra time on tests, including the SAT). I could say one of my best friends in highschool did that exact thing.
In the uber competetive private school I spent my highschool years in, where students went to college meant everything. Everyone knew where you were going to college and who could blame them? We were paying extra money to go to a select highschool in order to of course go to big name colleges where we could continue at a high level of education and in turn make more money when we graduate. SATs and GPAs ,in turn, meant a lot to students and when my friend who was always gifted in the class room couldn't break into the top scores of the SAT grading rubric, his parents attributed it to their underlying thought that he was 'distracted'.
Their solution: See their doctor.
My friend told me the play by play, he went to the doctor, she asked him a series of basic questions which he answered yes or no to and with passing this mere test he was immediately granted his 30mg of Adderol. Not only was he granted a prescription but he was granted 1.5x the amount of time regular students got on any in-school tests/quizzes. On top of all this, the most importat benefit of all this was extra time on the SATs.
Now whether my friend actually has ADD or not is besides the point because with the way they hand out medicines of that type these days, it is safe to say that some of the people who are getting these prescriptions don't actually have any issues. It shows how desperate some of these families are to get their children into these top tier schools, and I can understand the pressure. For a middle-class family to send their child to college it takes a scholarship most of the time, and who wouldn't do anything for one these days...
The article mention that on average the scores of the 7-9% who get extra time on the SATs do better than the national average. One would think this extra time should give them a fair-advantage not unfair-advantage to the rest of us issue-free students. The problem starts at the top, the doctors who administer these medicines need to create a better and more rigorous testing procedure for determining who actually needs medicine to help them concentrate. Not some test which asks "do you get distracted easily?" and a simple yes answer gets you pills in your hands.
Reply to "The effect of cell phones on over parenting"
Helicopter Mom
It was the middle of the winter and the snow was falling. I stepped outside to play but found myself unable to move. My jacket was so puffy and warm I couldn’t move my head. This of course was an immediate disadvantage in a snowball fight. I complained to my overbearing mother about my lack of peripheral vision. She didn’t care. Her only worry was that I didn’t come down with a bad case of pneumonia. My lack of fun was of no concern.
My mother is a baby boomer. Many would believe that this fact makes her a helicopter parent and therefore I, her only child, a victim of over parenting.
To some degree I can agree with that. But I certainly do not feel as though I am at a disadvantage because of the way I was raised. I believe that the bigger influence in the way my mother raised me was the fact that I was her only child. As so, she felt a responsibility to do it right.
As a child I was never denied anything I wanted as long as it would be beneficial to me in the eyes of my mother. From ballet, to tutors, to soccer, to a failed college advisor, my mother pulled out all the stops for me. I agree with the idea of helicopter parents but I do not believe that they are rampantly ruining a generation of hard workers.
OBVIOUSLY Kids Don't Know How to Make Their Own Decisions...
In response to If you’re not cheating than you're not trying hard enough
I have seen so many cases of students cheating in high school. Obviously, when someone got caught cheating, we would ask why or how they had cheated. My classmates would explain their extensive list of extra-curricular activities that simply didn’t give them enough time to properly study to receive the ever pressured grade of an A. Parents place such an importance on receiving good grades that instead of taking the time to truly learn the material and maybe getting a grade of a B, students find creative ways to cheat just to receive the A. This problem is very common now because students simply can’t receive a poor grade, a philosophy of perfection has been instilled by most parents, since the child’s genesis. It seems there is no longer room for fun and free time in a adolescents life, rather it must be filled with activities that promote future success.
The effect of Cell Phones on Overparenting
I agree with the author’s statement that cell phones are an essential tool for “overparenting.” A few weeks before my sister went off to college, nearly a month before me, I realized my mom was buying an unlimited text messaging and minutes plan. I inquired as to her justifications for spending the extra money, “Mom you don’t even know how to text,” I said in frustration. But once my sister was all moved into college, I realized why my mom had purchased the more extensive plan: she was texting my twin sister while we in the car even before we left the school parking lot. I realized that my mom was worried about my sister and used her cell phone to constantly check up on her. I told my mom that the only way for my sister to develop a sense of independence was to turn off the cell phone. Parents simply can’t make all life’s little problems go away with one touch dialing. Without such large access and the decreasing cost of cell phone plans, overparenting would cease as soon as the kid left the confines of their home. Overparenting can occur so easily now with cell phones because parents can call or text their kids and get updates every hour of the day. “I’m in class,” is no longer an excuse for not responding to a parent’s question. It seems a bit ridiculous and I think we will see more and more students willingly turn off their cell phones during class.
SAT Scores Not High Enough? See a Doctor!
One of the topics that I experienced firsthand in highschool was the fad of going to the pediatrician and having him or her diagnose you with ADD just because you were having trouble concentrating in school(but really because you had a lack of motivation and knew that if you were diagnosed with ADD you would get extra time on tests, including the SAT). I could say one of my best friends in highschool did that exact thing.
In the uber competetive private school I spent my highschool years in, where students went to college meant everything. Everyone knew where you were going to college and who could blame them? We were paying extra money to go to a select highschool in order to of course go to big name colleges where we could continue at a high level of education and in turn make more money when we graduate. SATs and GPAs ,in turn, meant a lot to students and when my friend who was always gifted in the class room couldn't break into the top scores of the SAT grading rubric, his parents attributed it to their underlying thought that he was 'distracted'.
Their solution: See their doctor.
My friend told me the play by play, he went to the doctor, she asked him a series of basic questions which he answered yes or no to and with passing this mere test he was immediately granted his 30mg of Adderol. Not only was he granted a prescription but he was granted 1.5x the amount of time regular students got on any in-school tests/quizzes. On top of all this, the most importat benefit of all this was extra time on the SATs.
Now whether my friend actually has ADD or not is besides the point because with the way they hand out medicines of that type these days, it is safe to say that some of the people who are getting these prescriptions don't actually have any issues. It shows how desperate some of these families are to get their children into these top tier schools, and I can understand the pressure. For a middle-class family to send their child to college it takes a scholarship most of the time, and who wouldn't do anything for one these days...
The article mention that on average the scores of the 7-9% who get extra time on the SATs do better than the national average. One would think this extra time should give them a fair-advantage not unfair-advantage to the rest of us issue-free students. The problem starts at the top, the doctors who administer these medicines need to create a better and more rigorous testing procedure for determining who actually needs medicine to help them concentrate. Not some test which asks "do you get distracted easily?" and a simple yes answer gets you pills in your hands.
If You're not cheating than you're not trying hard enough
In particular I had a friend in high school whose parents only cared about his grades. the kid had over 5 run-ins with the law and his parents would do anything to pay for a lawyer and get him out of trouble. He was tutored in three of his five subjects ever since middle school, took a class over the summer to catch up his Spanish, and had a hired agency fill out his college applications: just to succeed in school. The problem that I saw in this was that the child will not be able to survive in the next level in his life without his expensive help. Kids should get by by themselves.
Undergrad the new High School?
Reply To The Rise Of Over Parenting
Send Me all Your Grades through Email !
An example that could not be better is a girl I met right here at Drexel. She is highly intelligent naturally, and really never knew how to let loose. She believed in studying and studying and then just sleeping. Its actually something I admire sometimes, but it's almost un-human. Her parents will call her making sure she is studying. She lives over 9 hours away but her parents send her plane tickets just to come back on the weekends to make sure she stays out of trouble. This deeply troubles me and I wish I could fix it. Her personality is to always work, but she is an amazing person inside and out. If she could just let loose, she would make the world herself a much better place.
In response to “It’s all about locking yourself in your room and doing work because my MOM and DAD said so !!”
After reading this post, I actually laughed because this is exactly what I predicted would happen to the kid whose parents were too over-protective. I’m curious if the kid ever talked to his parents about how he is never allowed out—not to mention to his own senior prom—if he does well in school and takes above average classes? Maybe the situation would have played out differently and they would have slowly but surely let him do more things. Or maybe he could have just not listened to them for once and gone out on his own. Forgiveness is much easier to ask for than permission (as I recently just learned in my business class!).
Now, the kid has started college and with all this freedom he went a little crazy and his grades slipped. I was afraid that this was going to be my problem. My dad is really strict and he always gets pushy with taking AP courses and joining a lot of extracurricular activities. Fortunately, my parents are divorced and I have more lenient mother who I can talk to. She usually persuades him in the direction of letting me make my own decisions because I get treated like an adult in every other aspect—paying for my car, bills, doing my own chores, etc. I came to Drexel and I was surprised that students go out on Wednesday and Thursday nights. Occasionally, I’ll go out on a weekday and think nothing of it...but then sometime it'll hit me that it's a Tuesday or a Thursday and I'll stay in.
What I think is important for the kid mentioned in the post is that he should live by the expression “Work hard, play harder.” This is college and you don’t have too many restrictions but if you buckle down for a few hours a day and study and do your school work, you can still go out whenever you want. Limit yourself, however, to a few drinks (if that’s the case of his grades slipping) so you’re not regretting that night the next day at your 9am class. This isn’t an uncommon case and I think with time, once priorities get straightened out, everything will balance out.
The Child Trap
Having a strict parent like my dad was beneficial for me, in my opinion, because I had balance and discipline in my life. He isn’t as controlling as some people I know. I have a friend who has really religious parents. Her parents did not let her do anything to the point where she and some of her other friends made up a code language (like symbols) and would write in a notebook so if she left her notebook laying around and her parents snooped—which they did—she would not get in trouble for things she wrote. Unfortunately, her parents weren’t as dumb as she thought and ended up decoding the language and she was grounded for weeks. I feel really bad for kids who have extremely strict parents because their child just wants to enjoy their young teenage years doing normal things with their friends. My friend snuck out of her house and would go to parties and eventually her parents moved the family to Ohio where she now lives. I think that they are still super strict but she’s as college and probably enjoying all the freedom.
"Grab the dumb ones—they don’t know what the hell to do."
This is where the story starts paralleling the examples in the article. You see, Kelly's parents are both lawyers. Furthermore, there is no way they're going to let this teacher and this vice-principal get away with punishing their precious child with such unspeakable horrors. They've gotten Kelly out of messes like this before (no, this is not the first time Kelly has done this) and they're not afraid to do it again. Kelly's parents threaten the school with a lawsuit, and whaddaya know! The school backs down. Kelly doesn't get an in-school-suspension; she doesn't even get a detention. In fact, the only thing she gets is the opportunity to take a make up exam to replace the one she cheated on! Thanks to Kelly's lawyer parents, she can get away scot free with all kinds of untold academic mischief. It's ridiculous, but that's life, I suppose.
DISCLAIMER: Names have been changed to protect the guilty.
The Rise of Overparenting
The Child Trap Article
I see some truth in the article, but I also think that there were a lot of nonsense claims. I do agree with Marano that DVDs like Little Einstein are a scam. I think that your brain continues to grow and sculpt after infancy and toddler age because you cannot learn everything that early in life. I believe that much may be formed during that time, but it is not complete until much later in life. I also agree that over parenting spoils a child, but I think it can also be good as well. Over parenting goes to far when a child can run around screaming while the parents ignore it. On the other hand I do not think over parenting always includes anxiety and the need to achieve. I think if the child is being spoiled then it does not matter how the child does in school, but according to Marano over parenting puts extra stress on the child.
I think Honoré ‘s claim about over sanitation developing more allergies in children is true. I do not think Honoré’s claim about high self-esteem in children is not making them get better grades is true. It may be true for many children, but I think there is half who have the opposite occur, and do succeed. I think that Cross makes a great point about boys not wanting to grow up. He said boys do not want to grow up because they do not dominate the world anymore. I agree with this because power is shifting and I think males feel inferior because they are not used to it. I think there is a lot of truth to this article, but I also think there are parts that do not sound as legitimate.
I know someone who can be related to this article. This person had parents who forced them to do sports. They were forced to play sports that they hated and this was not fair. Their parents just pushed things on them, just like the article talked about. Their parents pushed them to be a specific profession, but they are not pursuing it. This person fits into the description of this over parenting article perfectly.
Helicopter Parents Can't Really Fly
Overprotected and Can't Think for his Own
I know a kid in college who still, to this day, does not make any decisions without consulting his mother, and he is perfectly content with it. His mother is extremely overprotective that everywhere he goes and everything he does, she has to know, and he doesn’t mind at all! He sends her all of his papers so that she can read them and edit them, and he lets her decide what hairstyle to sport and what type of clothes he should buy. Recently, he lost all of his friends due to his mother’s decisions. She believed that his friends were a bad influence on him (which is far from the truth, seeing that I know them all and they are really nice people), so he ended up dropping all of his friends to concentrate on school and make his mother happy. My cousin, who was one of his best friends, was really hurt by this all. It is sad to just think that the boy doesn’t have a mind of his own due to his overprotective, crazy mother.
Response to "Who's Calling Me?"
I can relate to "The Child Trap"
Response to: "Lucky to Have Normal Parents"
Response to "Who's Calling Me?"
Lucky to Have Normal Parents
Personally, I don't think I had parents that could be considered as the type that overparented me. There were times when they would get overprotective with giving me an early curfew and always calling me to find out what I was doing, who I was with, and when I would be home. I don't think it was so bad, although I felt differently back then. And I can't say that I know anyone that had parents like the ones described in the article. Everyone I knew had a pretty normal life growing up.
Response to Futile Football Strategy
Who's calling me?
The last example I can actually relate to. It was the second day of college, and a group of friends and I went out. We knew we would be back late so I should have called her. By the end of the night, it was close to two or three in the morning. For some reason, my phone kept ringing. I decided to check it after someone was calling me numerous times. And there it was, it was like I was home again. She was calling at two on a Saturday night. Even when I go away to college she still checks up on me. The next morning I called and said my phone was on silient. She was angry but my elaborate excuses were too good. She is very gullable so it was easy to convince her that was the reason. As weeks went on, I call her once in a while just to check up. She realizes I am busy and have things to do.
We are spoiled, over privaled and over-parented. HAH.
Response to "Fuckin' Piglet"
Futile Football Strategy
When parents start valuing everything a five year old says, it is a clear indicator of his future unless he can use friends to balance him. But if he is not allowed to be with other kids, his future does not look socially and academically bright. He had a trouble learning new information on a topic that he had learned earlier due to his stubborn behavior. He always thought he had the right to stand up to teachers, because his parents would let him. The "big" words he thought he knew what they meant proved to hurt his vocabulary, because again he thought he knew the real meaning. Overall, he was unable to hold friendships and was put into a small, private school after elementary school.
Fuckin' Piglet, man
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Response to "The Price of Success"
Child Captivity...really?
One of my friends, in particular, did not come from a family where the parents could afford tutors for their children or extra help on the college application process. Nevertheless, ever since the seventh grade she continually took the most difficult courses that were offered and through an innumerable amount of hours devoted to study and her own drive and intelligence, she graduated as valedictorian of my graduating class. When children are young, I can see how many parents may pressure them into trying many different things and giving the child more than they can handle. However when a child reaches a certain age, that drive to succeed turns from a need to please the parents into their own drive to succeed. I definitely agree with the author of the article when he states that as far as familial problems go, there are worse things than a pushy parent.
It's all about locking yourself in your room and doing work because my DAD and MOM said so !!
One of my friend is in college right now, but throughout his life he was pushed to do much stuff that a regular age guy in his grade wouldn’t do. His parents always pushed him to take all honors and AP classes. By the end of senior year when he counted up his honors and AP classes they were about 18 or so, he has never taken a regular class. Also, his parents were very strict about him going out. It was always about doing work and reading ahead in all his subjects. So, when all us friends decide to go out we call and ask him, his answer would always be “No, I’m sorry my parents said I can’t.” After a while we just gave up because we knew what the answer was going to me. His parents were also strict about letting him to his SENIOR PROM! Its like are you serious? He had to work around his parents and make sure he got good grades in order to go to the prom. Also, if he wanted to go to prom he wasn’t allowed to go out for 2 months or so. I believe that over parenting was a bad idea because now when he came to college it kicked him in his butt.
What I mean about that is that, once he got into college he had all the freedom to whatever he wants. Also, his parents pushed him to take honor classes. Do you know where that got him? It’s only first semester and he was doing bad because he had all the freedom to do what he wants. So, he took advantage of that freedom and screwed his grades over. This is why I believe that over parenting can corrupt a child. My parents were like that somewhat, but made them understand that if I do extra stuff I can ruin my GPA in high school and also in college. That made my parents realize that I should be able to make decisions and do what is best for me.
She wasn't a bad kid. She was very sweet and a good friend, but she could be grating. Any setback in school--a bad score on a test, someone else's poster being prettier than hers-- was a disaster. Being 'it' for too long in tag inevitably resulted in her quitting the game. At the tender age of eight, she taught me the reason so many adults let children win at board games. The day was not complete until this girl had cried at least once.
I wouldn't say she was unhappy, exactly, but most of her friends were kids she'd met through playdates her mother had set up with other mothers, and she often said to me that she wished she had as much free time as I did. It was really too bad, because there were a fair number of other kids our own age in our neighborhood, and those of us who weren't constantly being shuffled from one organized activity to another hung out a lot together and got to be good friends.
Big Sissy Kid
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
The Price of Success
Princeton, NYU, GW, Harvard..
These days, kids are under a lot of pressure to be the best at everything. Parents are making their kids participate in activities and sports that the son/daughter may not even want to take part in. I personally know a few people who have parents that are described in the article “The Child Trap”. My parents were always strict about mostly everything that I did, but when I see the pressures that my cousins go through, I feel like my parents take it easy on me. My three cousins are completely overparented by their mom and dad. School is the main subject that the parents are strict about. All three of my cousins have to take AP classes and do well in them. If they come home with a bad grade, the parents will make sure that the kids do not go out that weekend or do anything but study and do work. They have to participate in a few activities afterschool along with take SAT classes, take practice tests, come to family events etc. To top it off, they have the mind set that they have to go to an Ivy league school like NYU or Princeton, and the parents will not accept anything less then that. Every time I asked my cousin to come out with me to the mall or out for lunch her response would be, ”hold on let me ask my mom”
…2 minutes later…
“no sorry I cant my mom wont let me, I have to do my SAT work and I have a test that I have to study for”. After a while, I stopped asking because I knew exactly what her answer would be. I guess being strict about school is a good thing but only to a certain extent. My cousin would get so fed up about her parents that she would want to go against what they wanted just to prove a point. When this happens, you know the parents have gone way past their limit.
Overparented Children can have Rebellious Actions
One claim that the author makes about overparented children is that they face heavy academic schedules as well as a strenuous list of extracurricular activities. One of my friends from home, in my opinion, is overparented. Her parents force her to go to summer school and tell her she must take the hardest classes available to her. For extracurricular activities, she has a long and varied list. She participates in sports such as tennis and winter track. Also, she is on student council, advisory board and is a member of the Asian Student Association. On weekends, my friend has an early curfew. Her parents believe she should stay in and study rather than hang out with friends. However, she usually ends up sneaking out or going places without telling her parents where she is going because she does not agree with their rules and feels the need to be rebellious. I am not surprised that she does this, and I believe a lot of children who are overparented do the same thing because they feel like they are being suffocated and have no time to do activities that they want to do.
Another example of overparenting is when the child participates in an activity because his or her parents want them to. My father was overparented in this aspect. When he was young, my dad was a member of the marching band and played the saxophone. He only did this because his parents wanted him to. What my dad really wanted to do was play the guitar, but could not do this because his parents would not let him.