The Paradox of Parenting

 

Parents don't seem to enjoy parenting.

Related

  • I don't think it'd be very interesting to have a childless 20-something comment on an article about how children affect the happiness and satisfaction of their parents. But as a childless 20-something, I'd find it very interesting if some parents wanted to weigh in on Jennifer Senior's article rounding up the research on the question.

  • It giggles and wiggles its feet when you shake its rattle, but will get cranky and cry from too much tickling: Meet Yotaro, a Japanese robot programmed to be as fickle as a real baby.The cuddly baby-bot looks unearthly with a pair of luminous blue eyes and oversized cheeks, but engineering students are hoping it will teach young people the pleasures of parenting as Japan faces a demographic crisis.

  • "Sesame Street" Producer Cuts Staff by 20% (Bloomberg News)

  • Director of 'St. Jude National Outreach'

  • Stun gun maker Taser wants to help parents, not with jolts of electricity but with a tool which allows parents to effectively take over a child's mobile phone and manage its use."Basically we're taking old fashioned parenting and bringing it into the mobile world," Taser chairman and co-founder Tom Smith said at the Consumer Electronics Show here, where the Arizona company unveiled the new product."Because when you give your child his mobile phone you don't know who they're talking to, what they're sending or texting, all of those things," Smith told AFP.

  • To Polly Toynbee’s dismay, David Cameron says:The differences in child outcomes between a child born in poverty and a child born in wealth are no longer statistically significant when both have been raised by “confident and able” parents…

  • How obsessive over-parenting can give people a boost in divorce court.

  • Steven Horwitz Here's a fine example of the sort of nonsense that parents who don't like like economists will spew.  This contains at least one empirical fallacy and one example of bad reasoning.  Feel free to spot more.  It was a comment left on a blog post of Free Range Kids author Leonore Skenazy's at

  • Rogers Writes Letter to His Two Young Daughters - Investing Secrets: 1. Question Everything, 2. Never Follow the Crowd, and 3. Beware of Boys (Bloomberg News)

  • Australian parents who are struggling to cope with their children will be sent 'super nannies' to help them raise their offspring properly, under a state government plan released Sunday.The southern state of Victoria will begin a trial later this year in which parenting experts will visit the homes of vulnerable families to try to break the cycle of disadvantage and protect children."Becoming a parent is a difficult and confusing time for everyone, but some mums and dads need some extra help," Victoria's Community Services Minister Lisa Neville said.

 
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