The Educated Parent 2: Child Rearing in the 21st Century
By (Author) Joseph D. Sclafani Ph.D.
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
22nd February 2012
2nd edition
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
649.1
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
567g
Filled with relevant, expert, and practical child-rearing information, this invaluable guide also helps parents understand and utilize parenting resources ranging from scientific research to Internet sites to the popular press. Taking up where the 2004 edition of The Educated Parent left off, Child Rearing in the 21st Century is a must-have guide to parenting best practices. Author Joseph D. Sclafani, a psychologist and family therapist, highlights the different approaches to child rearing and provides practical advice about which approaches work best and why. Topics covered range from the role of the parent as supporter/protector to the efficacy of daycare and the ways parents can prepare for and assist in a child's education. The book also looks at parenting after a divorce, at the importance of fathers in children's lives, and at such 21st-century issues as cyberbullying and the anxiety-producing effects of societal pressures. One of the unique aspects of the book is that it presents and explains expert knowledge from journals and research studies that are often inaccessible to the everyday reader. Centers of parenting advice such as the Internet and parenting magazines are evaluated as well.
In this revision of The Educated Parent: Recent Trends in Raising Children (CH, Feb'05, 42-3504), Sclafani (psychology, Univ. of Tampa) continues to provide readers access to the appropriate theoretical discussions and research-based findings necessary to sort through and understand media blasts on topics such as helicopter parenting, tiger moms, cyber bullying, sexting, and the effects of day care. . . . Sclafani also provides insightful evaluations of online-based parenting advice centers and parenting magazines to assist parents in finding quality information, should they seek more depth on topics. Summing Up: Recommended. * Choice *
Joseph D. Sclafani, PhD, is professor of psychology and interim associate provost and dean of academic services at the University of Tampa, Tampa, FL.