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Children Enjoy More Freedom At Home Than Outside, Says Researcher

by Aruna on Aug 8 2009 8:17 AM

Children these days enjoy more freedom at home, but they are more restricted outside the home finds an American researcher.

Dr. Markella Rutherford, from Wellesley College, says that the growth in personal autonomy at home over the last few decades could be the result of shrinking opportunities to participate in activities outside the home, without Mom and Dad looking over their shoulder.

Her analysis of back issues of the popular US magazine, Parents, maps how the portrayal of parental authority and children's autonomy has changed over the last century.

She points out that parents are faced with a difficult task when they try to balance authority with children's autonomy: they are trying to be the right kind of parents, while at the same time trying to form the right kind of kids.

And there are many sources of information and social support that parents turn to in order to achieve this balance, including family, friends, doctors, teachers, other parents and the media.

To study how parental authority and children's autonomy have been portrayed over the last century, Dr. Rutherford analyzed a total of 300 advice columns and relevant editorials from 34 randomly chosen issues of Parents magazine, published between 1929 and 2006, to see how parental authority and children's autonomy have been portrayed over the last century.

She found that while the magazine articles showed greater autonomy for children in some areas, they also depicted children as having become more constrained in others.

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The researcher revealed that instead of an overall increased autonomy, the study found evidence of a historical trade-off: while children appear to have gained autonomy in private spaces in their homes, they have lost much of their public autonomy outside the home.

Dr. Rutherford said that the articles in the journal showed that children were increasingly autonomous when it came to their self-expression, particularly in relation to daily activity chores, personal appearance and defiance of parents.

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In contrast to this increased autonomy that child-centered parenting has given children, the 20th century has seen, in other ways, children's autonomy curtailed, through increasingly restricted freedom of movement and substantially delayed acceptance of responsibilities.

Based on the observations she made during the study, Dr. Rutherford concludes that children these days have fewer opportunities to conduct themselves in public spaces free from adult supervision than they did in the early and mid-twentieth century.

She said: "Today's parents face demands that require near-constant surveillance of their children. Allowing children more autonomy to express themselves and their disagreements at home may well be a response to the loss of more substantial forms of children's autonomy to move through and participate in their communities on their own."

Her findings have been published online in Springer's journal Qualitative Sociology.

Source-ANI
ARU


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