How to Raise Successful People: Simple Lessons for Radical Results

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How to Raise Successful People: Simple Lessons for Radical Results

How to Raise Successful People: Simple Lessons for Radical Results

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Following decades of scientific research, here is a list of things every parent can do to create favorable conditions for their children to succeed. However, if you are trustworthy and respectful, your child will grow into just that kind of adult. And this is the difference between independent and needy children. Collaborative Parenting Is All About Kindness and Understanding But soon the questions and doubts started to creep in. I couldn’t figure out how to hold Susan, and I didn’t know how to change a diaper. I’d stopped teaching only three weeks earlier, which didn’t give me much time to prepare. And I never really understood exactly how I was supposed to prepare in the first place. The ob-gyn told me to take it easy for at least six weeks after the birth. My friends and colleagues gave me all kinds of conflicting advice. They told me labor was going to be long and hard, that nursing was too difficult and restrictive, that bottles and Similac were better. I read a few books on nutrition for adults (there weren’t any titles specific to children at that time), and I bought a crib, some clothing, and a small plastic bathtub. And then suddenly Susan was there in my arms, with her big blue eyes and peach-fuzz hair, staring up at me as if I knew exactly what to do.

How to Raise Successful Children Like the Wojcicki Sisters | TIME How to Raise Successful Children Like the Wojcicki Sisters | TIME

The researchers found that the majority of ultra elite athletes came from environments that advocated a culture of striving. They grew up in homes where pursuing excellence and pushing the boundaries were always expected, not merely desired. A childhood in which one feels accepted and nurtured is one of the best predictors of adult success, well-being, and life satisfaction. The other thing is that many of the high-achieving students we interviewed said they didn’t receive much praise from their parents growing up. Some of them said they were never quite sure how proud their parents were. They knew that if they fell short of their parents’ expectations, their parents would ask why and be disappointed, but if they met their parents’ expectations, it was just treated as normal. One parent said the most important quality to teach a kid is humility because when you think you’re good enough, you stop trying to be better and there’s much less of an impulse to continue striving. Julie Lythcott-Haims says that there are at least four types of parenting: authoritarian (demanding and unresponsive), permissive (undemanding and responsive), neglectful (undemanding and unresponsive), and authoritative (demanding and responsive).

The following tips aren’t exhaustive, but they are a good starting point for parents who want to know how to raise successful kids and become the best parents they can be. 1. Be A Warm, Responsive, And Accepting Parent This book will give you amazing tips and understanding on how to raise children and in general how to improve anyone life, may be your Kid, Friends, Employees or Associates. First, I enjoyed the introduction and the author's personal stories. I also liked her suggestion of really thinking about your own childhood and using experiences from your own childhood to more purposely parent your own children. I don't have the means or access Woj does. But I know what I can do to prepare my children for the world and set them up to hopefully have the access, resources, and heart to do better for others and their kin. Read this, share this, build your village, and celebrate parenting. She argues kids are depressed because of this pressure to succeed, yet the book's very reason for existence is the success of her daughters. Although she lectures other parents that kindness is more important, throughout the book she keeps giving examples of kids in her class who rose to great success because of her program, or at least rose to a status above that of their family. No examples are given of students who became teachers, social workers, or small shop owners. Only the great successes count. And I think it is this cult of success, the idea that you only count if you do something exceptional, that is making kids depressed, not the garden variety pressure of parents wanting you to get at least a B.

9 Tips for How to Be Successful in Life - Verywell Mind

In general, children do need structure, but they also need freedom, so creating that perfect mixture should be your goal as a parent. 12min Tip Every child is born with more advanced skills in some areas over others. Your kid may have spatial strengths, like the ability to think abstractly and in multiple dimensions. Or maybe they're gifted in math and can analyze problems logically or investigate issues scientifically. In 2017, a team of British researchers studied the differences between "elite" and "ultra elite" athletes. (Of course, all NBA players are elite — but then there's Michael Jordan or LeBron James or Kobe Bryant, whose accomplishments stand out immensely compared to the others.)But there are commonalities. The tiger parent and the master parent do not allow their child to give up easily after they’ve become engaged with something. The difference is that the master parent allows their child to choose what to engage with. And authoritative parenting has to do mainly with behavior issues, even though it’s often associated with higher achievement. The role of the revealer, for example, would not be featured when talking about authoritative parenting. The philosopher might come in when you talk about ethical behavior, but not that much. The authoritative parenting style was identified by psychologist Diana Baumrind in the late 1960s as one in which parents are responsive and loving, while enforcing high expectations and clear boundaries, mainly for the child’s behavior. But master parents also cultivate a love of learning, a sense of purpose, and the type of personal agency that can help a child become highly successful, like the people in our book. Wojciki puts together a framework for child raising which is almost diametrically opposed to the “Tiger Mother” approach. It’s an interesting take (particularly the emphasis on kindness), but the tone is maddening. Wojciki is the mother of three incredibly successful women, and a celebrated educator and speaker in her own right, and boy does she let you know it. There’s a heavy strand of smug self-congratulation which runs all the way through this: “… and who knew that I’d figured out how to do exactly the right thing…”



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