
WHY
PARENTING EDUCATION IS NEEDED
IN CONNECTICUT SCHOOLS

Connecticut
Coalition for Child Development Education
Why Parenting Education is
Needed in Connecticut Schools
1. A society in which
parenting is a valued occupation undertaken only by prepared adults will help
assure that children are well-nurtured, emotionally healthy and capable of
reaching their full potential.
2. The years from birth to school age are the most important for developing the
psychological stability of a person and the empathy and social, intellectual
and emotional skills that a child needs to succeed in school and in life,
but many parents do not know good ways of doing this because they have never
been taught.
3. Although some children are getting some of the social, emotional, and
intellectual guidance they need from trained teachers in preschools, only about
25% of Connecticut
children are in preschool. Consequently, this vital education is not
reaching most of the children in our state.
4. Even if we establish universal preschool in this state, children still will
spend the majority of their time with their parents.
5. Early experiences impact a child's brain, impacting lifelong potential for
learning, relationships and mental and physical health.
6. Empathy and nurturing skills can be taught.
7. Young people who have empathy and nurturing skills are less violent and less
likely to become abusive parents.
8. Effective parenting lays the groundwork for better intellectual and mental
health in future generations
9. Most people don't take a parenting course after they become parents (surveys
range from 5 to about 30 % who do). How are they supposed to know all that
research has found about the most effective ways of raising children from birth
to adolescence if it is not taught in schools?
10. Although an elective child development course is taught in most high
schools, only about 8 % of students in Connecticut
take it, according to a survey done a few years ago by New Haven school psychologist Bob Margolies
11. Understanding the responsibilities of parenting encourages teens to
postpone undertaking this demanding role.
12. Social and emotional literacy improve learning by creating caring classroom
environments.
13. Statistics show a lot of parents do not know how to give their children the
care and support they need in their early years to help them grow
into upstanding, reliable, self-sufficient, and emotionally stable adults
(statistics were obtained last year)
- There are about 1.8 million reports of child
abuse a year in this country; about 1300 children a year die from
child abuse (National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect
Information, 2004)
- About 20% of American children suffer from a
mental disorder in any given year. (National Institute of Mental
Health figures, Oct. 2002)
- 9 % of adolescents and 2 %of children
(some as young as four) exhibit symptoms of depression.
- The rate of suicide among 10-14-year-olds doubled
between 1980 and l996. (Child Welfare League of America)
- Almost half of high school students have had
sexual intercourse. The number has doubled in 10 years
- We have one of the highest teenage birth rates of
any industrialized nation; Teen mothers are more
likely to be unmarried (79%), to live in poverty and often do not have the
maturity and knowledge to care for a child adequately. (Child Trends
Research Brief, 2001)
- 10 % of youths 12-17 were current drug users in
2001; in 2000 the rate was 9.7 %. (Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration national survey)
- One-third of America's children live in
homes without their fathers; Two out of five of these have not seen their
father in more than a year.
- A 25-year study found that young men who grew up
in homes without fathers are twice as likely to be arrested and
imprisoned. Children from fatherless homes also have higher
rates of teen suicide, substance abuse and neglect and running away
from home. (Preparing Tomorrow's Parents Today,
Guide for Educators and Advocates, 2001). Every young man in our country
needs to be taught this and taught that his responsibilities if he
fathers a child include much more than financial support of the
child.
14. A parenting education
program in schools that reaches all children is the only way we can reach all
potential parents and teach them such vital things as:
- Parenting requires
love, trust, and respect for children, and a commitment to consistency. A
sense of humor also helps.
- The responsibilities of parenthood
- How to keep children safe (eg. knowing that
shaking a baby can cause brain damage and death; Childproofing a
house; the danger of leaving a baby alone in a tub, etc)·
- The importance of nurturing, loving care in
infancy, cuddling babies, responding promptly and adequately to
their needs; research shows lack of this care can cause severe emotional
problems and even sociopathic behavior in childhood and later life
- Good ways of guiding children's behavior other
than spanking (time outs; withdrawal of privileges;
distraction for 2-3 year-olds; delayed gratification; rewards for good
behavior; natural consequences; logical consequences, etc.)
- Results of child abuse, including emotional
abuse: what it is and why it occurs and how it can damage children
- How to communicate effectively with children of
different ages
- Stages of child development; what a child
can and can't be expected to do at different ages
- The importance of fathers to a child's
well-being, success and sense of identity
- The impact of parental divorce and separation on
children; how to handle these situations to minimize the impact on the
child
- How and when to teach a child such key social and
emotion skills as: responsibility; respect; empathy; good manners;
handling his emotions; self control, etc.
The Connecticut Coalition for Child Development
Education, formerly the Connecticut Coalition
for Parenting Education is comprised of approximately 40 people and
organizations dedicated to bringing education in child safety, child
development and parenting skills to all Connecticut
students sometime before they graduate from high school. Members include Yale
psychology professor Edward Zigler, who helped launch Head Start, Yale child
psychiatrists Kyle Pruett and James Comer, the Connecticut Department of
Children and Families, the Mental Health Association of Connecticut; the
Connecticut Child Advocate, pediatricians, psychologists, social workers,
parents, and other state residents.
Nine years of coalition experience with the legislature and Commissioners of
Education indicate the need for a groundswell of public support to bring about
action. For more information and to get involved, contact Joan Barbuto,
Coordinator of the Coalition, at joanbstone@aol.com or 203/269-1946.
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