logging in or signing up AHDA2005Pryor Jancis Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 64 Category: Education License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: February 24, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 1 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Children in Changing Family Structures: Children in Changing Family Structures Jan Pryor Roy McKenzie Centre for the Study of Families Victoria University Wellington New ZealandSlide2: ‘Child Development: a field of study devoted to understanding all aspects of human growth and change from conception through adolescence.’ Laura Berk. ‘A family is a group of people which all care about each other. They can cry together, laugh together, argue together and go through all the emotions together. Some live together as well. Families are for helping each other through life.’ 13 year old girl.Four paradigms of childhood: Four paradigms of childhood Children as devils (original sin) Children as tabula rasa (John Locke) Children as angels (Rousseau) Children as embryonic adultsSlide4: ‘For those researchers for whom exploring children’s roles as social actors constitutes a central concern, children’s competence is taken for granted. The question they pose, instead, is how that competence is acknowledged and expressed or disguised and controlled in and through children’s everyday relationships.’ James, 1998.Slide5: ‘The peculiarity of the late twentieth century and the root cause of much confusion and angst about childhood, is that a public discourse that argues that children are persons with rights to a degree of autonomy is at odds with the remnants of the romantic view that the right of a child is to be a child.’ Cunningham 1995.History of Families: History of Families Households as economic units (17th and 18th centuries) Industrial revolution (19th century) Compulsory education for children (late 19th century)Twentieth century changes: Twentieth century changes Lower mortality and ability to control fertility Heyday of nuclear family ‘Companionate’ marriages Feminist movement20th Century changes cont.: 20th Century changes cont. Women moving into the workforce Increased rates of separation and divorce Increased rates of cohabitation Increased rates of re-partneringHow do today’s families look?: How do today’s families look? Marriage and childbirth happening at later ages Commitment no longer precedes cohabiting Fathers both more and less involved with childrenSole father households in NZ 2001: Sole father households in NZ 2001 16.5% of sole parent households headed by fathers Over a quarter of sole parent households with 15-17 year olds headed by fathers Over 22% of sole parent households with 10 to 14 year-olds headed by fathers Today’s families cont.: Today’s families cont. Diversity of family structures; children may be raised by same-sex, unmarried, multiple, nonrelated parents. Children likely to experience one or more family transitions in childhoodTransition statistics from Christchurch longitudinal study: Transition statistics from Christchurch longitudinal study 50% of children either born into or entered a single parent family by age 16 71% of these re-entered a 2 parent family within five years 53% remarriages or repartnerships dissolved within five yearsChristchurch longitudinal study cont.: Christchurch longitudinal study cont. 70% reconciled families dissolved within five years 27% children had experienced 2 family situations by the age of nine 18% had experienced 3 family situations by the age of nine.Today’s families cont.: Today’s families cont. Paramountcy of the parent-child relationship Multiple ethnicities Children’s power in families and societyImplications for Developmental Psychology: Implications for Developmental Psychology Attachment Parenting Biological vs fictive kin Identity You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
AHDA2005Pryor Jancis Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 64 Category: Education License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: February 24, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 1 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Children in Changing Family Structures: Children in Changing Family Structures Jan Pryor Roy McKenzie Centre for the Study of Families Victoria University Wellington New ZealandSlide2: ‘Child Development: a field of study devoted to understanding all aspects of human growth and change from conception through adolescence.’ Laura Berk. ‘A family is a group of people which all care about each other. They can cry together, laugh together, argue together and go through all the emotions together. Some live together as well. Families are for helping each other through life.’ 13 year old girl.Four paradigms of childhood: Four paradigms of childhood Children as devils (original sin) Children as tabula rasa (John Locke) Children as angels (Rousseau) Children as embryonic adultsSlide4: ‘For those researchers for whom exploring children’s roles as social actors constitutes a central concern, children’s competence is taken for granted. The question they pose, instead, is how that competence is acknowledged and expressed or disguised and controlled in and through children’s everyday relationships.’ James, 1998.Slide5: ‘The peculiarity of the late twentieth century and the root cause of much confusion and angst about childhood, is that a public discourse that argues that children are persons with rights to a degree of autonomy is at odds with the remnants of the romantic view that the right of a child is to be a child.’ Cunningham 1995.History of Families: History of Families Households as economic units (17th and 18th centuries) Industrial revolution (19th century) Compulsory education for children (late 19th century)Twentieth century changes: Twentieth century changes Lower mortality and ability to control fertility Heyday of nuclear family ‘Companionate’ marriages Feminist movement20th Century changes cont.: 20th Century changes cont. Women moving into the workforce Increased rates of separation and divorce Increased rates of cohabitation Increased rates of re-partneringHow do today’s families look?: How do today’s families look? Marriage and childbirth happening at later ages Commitment no longer precedes cohabiting Fathers both more and less involved with childrenSole father households in NZ 2001: Sole father households in NZ 2001 16.5% of sole parent households headed by fathers Over a quarter of sole parent households with 15-17 year olds headed by fathers Over 22% of sole parent households with 10 to 14 year-olds headed by fathers Today’s families cont.: Today’s families cont. Diversity of family structures; children may be raised by same-sex, unmarried, multiple, nonrelated parents. Children likely to experience one or more family transitions in childhoodTransition statistics from Christchurch longitudinal study: Transition statistics from Christchurch longitudinal study 50% of children either born into or entered a single parent family by age 16 71% of these re-entered a 2 parent family within five years 53% remarriages or repartnerships dissolved within five yearsChristchurch longitudinal study cont.: Christchurch longitudinal study cont. 70% reconciled families dissolved within five years 27% children had experienced 2 family situations by the age of nine 18% had experienced 3 family situations by the age of nine.Today’s families cont.: Today’s families cont. Paramountcy of the parent-child relationship Multiple ethnicities Children’s power in families and societyImplications for Developmental Psychology: Implications for Developmental Psychology Attachment Parenting Biological vs fictive kin Identity