Selling Out America's Children

Selling Out America's Children
Title Selling Out America's Children PDF eBook
Author David Walsh
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 1995
Genre Child consumers
ISBN 9780925190475

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In Selling Out America's Children, author David Walsh examines why essential morals and values are missing in today's youth. We sell violence, irresponsible sex, and materialism to our children with the overwhelming power of modern media; in light of such odds, it is not surprising that parents find it increasingly difficult to counteract society's harmful messages. - Back cover.

Selling Out America's Children

Selling Out America's Children
Title Selling Out America's Children PDF eBook
Author David Allen Walsh
Publisher Fairview Press
Total Pages 170
Release 1994
Genre Family & Relationships
ISBN

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In Selling Out America's Children, author David Walsh examines why essential morals and values are missing in today's youth. We sell violence, irresponsible sex, and materialism to our children with the overwhelming power of modern media; in light of such odds, it is not surprising that parents find it increasingly difficult to counteract society's harmful messages. - Back cover.

The Children's Book of America

The Children's Book of America
Title The Children's Book of America PDF eBook
Author William J. Bennett
Publisher Simon and Schuster
Total Pages 128
Release 1998-11-02
Genre Fiction
ISBN 0684849305

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Presents stories of significant events and people in American history, patriotic songs, and American folk tales and poems.

The Diseasing of America's Children

The Diseasing of America's Children
Title The Diseasing of America's Children PDF eBook
Author Dr. John Rosemond
Publisher Thomas Nelson
Total Pages 276
Release 2009-06-01
Genre Family & Relationships
ISBN 1418569216

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How parents, teachers, and even professionals are being deceived by the "ADHD Establishment" regarding ADHD and other childhood behavior disorders and the drugs used to treat them. The issue of diagnosing children with behavioral diseases that do not conform to a scientific definition of disease, and then medicating them is a scandal ready to erupt. In The Diseasing of America's Children, popular family psychologist, speaker, and best-selling author John Rosemond joins with pediatrician Dr. Bose Ravenel to uncover the fiction and fallacy behind attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), early-onset biopolar disorder (EOBD), and the drugs prescribed to treat them. Rosemond and Ravenel will: reveal the pseudo-science behind these diagnoses explain how parents, teachers, and even professionals are deceived expose the short- and long-term dangers behavioral drugs pose to children discuss how America's schools are unwittingly feeding the diagnostic beast reveal the simple, common sense truth behind these behavior problems and give parents a practical program for curing these problems without drugs or dependence on professionals

Why America's Children Can't Think

Why America's Children Can't Think
Title Why America's Children Can't Think PDF eBook
Author Peter Kline
Publisher Inner Ocean Publishing
Total Pages 440
Release 2002
Genre Education
ISBN

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Kline argues, from experience as a teacher, researcher, and consultant in reading and accelerated learning skills, that standardized testing produces a population that can follow instructions, but it kills our greatest resource: the creative minds of our children.

Ask the Children

Ask the Children
Title Ask the Children PDF eBook
Author Ellen Galinsky
Publisher William Morrow
Total Pages 416
Release 1999-09-22
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780688147525

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Asks children how they feel about working parents, and includes valuable data, such as the difference in parenting styles between mothers and fathers

America's Children

America's Children
Title America's Children PDF eBook
Author Donald J. Hernandez
Publisher Russell Sage Foundation
Total Pages 505
Release 1993-04-08
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1610442865

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America's Children offers a valuable overview of the dramatic transformations in American childhood over the past fifty years, a period of historic shifts that reduced the human and material resources available to our children. Alarmingly, one fifth of all U.S. children now grow up in poverty, many are without health insurance, and about 30 percent never graduate from high school. Despite such conditions, economic, family, and educational programs for children earn low national priority and must depend on inconsistent state and local management. Drawing upon both historical and recent data, including census information from 1940 to 1980, Donald J. Hernandez provides a vivid portrait of children in America and puts forth a forceful case for overhauling our national child welfare policies. Hernandez shows how important revolutions in household composition and income, parental education and employment, childcare, and levels of poverty have affected children's well-being. As working wives and single mothers increasingly replace the traditional homemaker, children spend greater portions of time in educational and daycare facilities outside the home, and those with single mothers stand the greatest chance of being welfare dependent. Wider changes in society have created even greater stress for children in certain groups as they age: out-of-wedlock births are on the rise for white teenagers, half of all Hispanic youths never graduate high school, and violence accounts for nearly 90 per cent of all black teenage deaths. America's Children explores the interaction of many trends in children's lives and the fundamental social, demographic, and economic processes that lie at their core. The book concludes with a thoughtful analysis of the ability of families and government to provide for a new age of children, with emphasis on reducing racial inequities and providing greater public support for families, comparable to the family policies of other developed countries. As the traditional "Ozzie and Harriet" family recedes into collective memory, the importance of creating strong national policies for children is amplified, particularly in the areas of financial assistance, health insurance, education, and daycare. America's Children provides a compelling guide for reassessing the forces that shape our children and the resources available to safeguard their future. "In this conceptually creative, methodologically rigorous, and empirically rich book, Hernandez uses census and survey data to describe several quite profound changes that have characterized the life courses of America's children and their families over the last 50 to 150 years....this erudite book is destined to be a classic." —Richard M. Lerner, Contemporary Psychology "America's Children goes a long way toward informing the debate on the causes of increasing poverty, and it challenges some widely held misperceptions....its study of resources available to children (and their families) lays a valuable foundation for surveying trends in family structure, education, and income sources....Anyone interested in the changing lives of children should read it; anyone interested in understanding the causes and patterns of poverty, and in designing a better welfare system, must read it." —Ellen B. Magenheim, Journal of Policy Analysis and Management A Volume in the Russell Sage Foundation Census Series