Descripción del título
According to the study conducted by Gallup Organization, only a minority of Americans experience consistent normative motivation for engaging with other people's children. Social norms theory suggests that adults are more likely to get deeply involved if that involvement is viewed as highly important, and if they perceive a social expectation to do so. This volume examines the nature of social norms in general and in relationship to children and adolescents. The book examines the complex dynamics of understanding the appropriate roles of parents and other adults in young people's healthy development. The volume also presents the study's findings in detail, including numerous areas of consensus among American adults, differences among American adults, and the gap between perceived importance and actual engagement. A wide-ranging literature synthesis suggests implications for both personal and collective actions with potential to change norms that inhibit engagement and to strengthen values that encourage engagement
Monografía
monografia Rebiun25698112 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun25698112 m o d cr mnu---uuaaa 121227s2003 mau o 000 0 eng 9781461501473 electronic bk.) 1461501474 electronic bk.) 9781461349433 1461349435 10.1007/978-1-4615-0147-3 doi AU@ 000051720257 NZ1 14984931 NZ1 15312572 CBUC 991032664659706706 AU@ eng pn AU@ OCLCO OCLCQ OCLCO GW5XE UA@ COO OCLCQ UAB OCLCF OCLCQ TKN LEAUB OCLCQ JMC bicssc PSY004000 bisacsh 155.4 23 155.424 23 Scales, Peter C. Other People's Kids Social Expectations and American Adults' Involvement with Children and Adolescents by Peter C. Scales Boston, MA Springer US 2003 Boston, MA Boston, MA Springer US 1 online resource (xix, 274 pages) 1 online resource (xix, 274 pages) Text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier The Search Institute Series on Developmentally Attentive Community and Society 2 1. Adults' Real Relationships with Young People -- 2. Parents, Other Adults, and Responsibility for Positive Child and Youth Development -- 3. The Nature and Operation of Social Norms -- 4. How Content and Culture Influence Adults' Sense of Reasonable Responsibility for Young People -- 5. Personal and Collective Action to Raise Healthy, Caring, Competent Young People: Defining Reasonable Responsibilities and Expectations for All Adults -- 6. Engagement with Kids: An American Consensus on Core Adult Actions -- 7. Normative Fragmentation: The Disappearance of Consensus -- 8. Multiple Normative Americas: The Differences among Us -- 9. Strategies for Increasing Adult Engagement with Other People's Kids -- Appendix A: Study Methodology -- Appendix B: Forced-Choice National Survey Questions -- Appendix C: Hypothetical Situations Posed for In-Depth Interviews -- Appendix D: Sampling Tolerance -- References -- About the Author According to the study conducted by Gallup Organization, only a minority of Americans experience consistent normative motivation for engaging with other people's children. Social norms theory suggests that adults are more likely to get deeply involved if that involvement is viewed as highly important, and if they perceive a social expectation to do so. This volume examines the nature of social norms in general and in relationship to children and adolescents. The book examines the complex dynamics of understanding the appropriate roles of parents and other adults in young people's healthy development. The volume also presents the study's findings in detail, including numerous areas of consensus among American adults, differences among American adults, and the gap between perceived importance and actual engagement. A wide-ranging literature synthesis suggests implications for both personal and collective actions with potential to change norms that inhibit engagement and to strengthen values that encourage engagement Philosophy (General) Social sciences Psychology, clinical Developmental psychology Developmental psychology. Social sciences. Electronic books Print version 9781461349433 Search Institute series on developmentally attentive community and society 2