The document discusses changes in parenting in Britain over the past 50 years based on sociological studies and observations. It notes a growing indifference from some parents in meeting children's basic needs. It also observes how a minority of children's home lives fail to provide unconditional commitment to nurturing children successfully. The transmission of parenting skills from generation to generation has changed as extended families have reduced and more single parent households now have smaller knowledge bases to learn from. This has led to a tacit acceptance of dysfunctional conditions that are less favorable for childrearing.
Dominican Starfish Foundation--Our current projects and future goals. Louise ZoBell
You'll find here the current projects of Dominican Starfish and our partners as well as some of our future goals for our foundation. Thanks to everyone who has donated their time and money to these wonderful projects.
Our Dominican humanitarian activities that led to Dominican Starfish FoundationLouise ZoBell
We started coming to the Dominican Republic in 2006. We originally earned a vacation from a company we worked for. We bought a vacation package and gradually became more and more involved in the community. In 2012 we registered Dominican Starfish Foundation.
Dominican Starfish Foundation with Toni ZoBell builds another new home in the...Louise ZoBell
Elvis and Julia and their family have been living in poverty in the Dominican Republic. Toni ZoBell from Canada saw the conditions in the Dominican on her visit in January 2014. She went home, sold her property in Nicaragua and donated the money for this home in the Dominican.
Dominican Starfish Foundation-Building Homes for the needy. Louise ZoBell
Our home building projects have expanded quickly in the Dominican Republic. It was something that definitely wasn't part of our plans when we started the foundation. We are looking for others to partner with us so that we can expand even more. You could build a home and change a life forever.
Dominican Starfish Foundation--Our current projects and future goals. Louise ZoBell
You'll find here the current projects of Dominican Starfish and our partners as well as some of our future goals for our foundation. Thanks to everyone who has donated their time and money to these wonderful projects.
Our Dominican humanitarian activities that led to Dominican Starfish FoundationLouise ZoBell
We started coming to the Dominican Republic in 2006. We originally earned a vacation from a company we worked for. We bought a vacation package and gradually became more and more involved in the community. In 2012 we registered Dominican Starfish Foundation.
Dominican Starfish Foundation with Toni ZoBell builds another new home in the...Louise ZoBell
Elvis and Julia and their family have been living in poverty in the Dominican Republic. Toni ZoBell from Canada saw the conditions in the Dominican on her visit in January 2014. She went home, sold her property in Nicaragua and donated the money for this home in the Dominican.
Dominican Starfish Foundation-Building Homes for the needy. Louise ZoBell
Our home building projects have expanded quickly in the Dominican Republic. It was something that definitely wasn't part of our plans when we started the foundation. We are looking for others to partner with us so that we can expand even more. You could build a home and change a life forever.
2014 DOMINICAN STARFISH FOUNDATION UPDATE SUMMARYLouise ZoBell
This is an update of the humanitarian activities of the Dominican Starfish Foundation during the past year. We have built 14 homes in the past year, taken a shipping container and done many more things in the Dominican Republic to help the people there.
In the United States, pregnant women have come under a nearly microscopic public ‘lens’ regarding their behavior during pregnancy. Pregnant women are increasingly cast as a form of ‘public property’ with women warned against hundreds of risks, from eating deli meats, Camembert cheese and alfalfa sprouts to the ubiquitous stern warnings about smoking and alcohol use. In its most extreme form, the policing of pregnancy has led to the criminal prosecution of women for in utero ‘child neglect, abuse or endangerment’, delivering drugs to a ‘minor’ or even, as in one case, convicted of homicide for a stillbirth that the court claimed was the result of drug use during pregnancy (with a prison sentence of 12 years).
Babysjoy have a wide mixed bag of items and diffrent sorts of brand, where you can pick the best things for your kid. Our gave all marked things are sourced from approved agents or makers.
Congratulations! Your New Baby Is Here! It seems like you've been waiting for this moment forever. Then, suddenly it’s here. You may feel as though you've forgotten everything you've read or learned and aren't sure what to do with yourself right now! Relax. You’ll get plenty of helpful advice from your pediatrician, family, and friends. You can also refer to this new parent guide that covers some of the basics about caring for your newborn in the first 10 days. Take it one step at a time. Just do what comes naturally and enjoy every one of these blissful first days with your newborn.
2014 DOMINICAN STARFISH FOUNDATION UPDATE SUMMARYLouise ZoBell
This is an update of the humanitarian activities of the Dominican Starfish Foundation during the past year. We have built 14 homes in the past year, taken a shipping container and done many more things in the Dominican Republic to help the people there.
In the United States, pregnant women have come under a nearly microscopic public ‘lens’ regarding their behavior during pregnancy. Pregnant women are increasingly cast as a form of ‘public property’ with women warned against hundreds of risks, from eating deli meats, Camembert cheese and alfalfa sprouts to the ubiquitous stern warnings about smoking and alcohol use. In its most extreme form, the policing of pregnancy has led to the criminal prosecution of women for in utero ‘child neglect, abuse or endangerment’, delivering drugs to a ‘minor’ or even, as in one case, convicted of homicide for a stillbirth that the court claimed was the result of drug use during pregnancy (with a prison sentence of 12 years).
Babysjoy have a wide mixed bag of items and diffrent sorts of brand, where you can pick the best things for your kid. Our gave all marked things are sourced from approved agents or makers.
Congratulations! Your New Baby Is Here! It seems like you've been waiting for this moment forever. Then, suddenly it’s here. You may feel as though you've forgotten everything you've read or learned and aren't sure what to do with yourself right now! Relax. You’ll get plenty of helpful advice from your pediatrician, family, and friends. You can also refer to this new parent guide that covers some of the basics about caring for your newborn in the first 10 days. Take it one step at a time. Just do what comes naturally and enjoy every one of these blissful first days with your newborn.
This paper is based on qualitative interviews with younger and older mothers and examines how they construct and present themselves as good mothers in relation to dominant discourses of good motherhood. Here I will focus on presenting my analysis of how mothers’ moral maternal selves are articulated across interconnected sites of difference such as class, gender, age at first birth and employment. My investigation of the moral work undertaken by mothers looks at their comparisons with other mothers, their experiences of ‘shared’ parenting and of combining mothering with paid work.
The Angelino & McNeil Family- A Tale of Two Families The Angelino Fami.docxhenry34567896
The Angelino & McNeil Family: A Tale of Two Families
The Angelino Family The Angelino family has five children and a sixth is on the way. The children’s ages are 14 (girl), 12 (boy), 10 (girl), 7 (boy), and 6 (girl). They all attend a nearby parochial school. Mr. Angelino owns a third-generation butcher shop that was begun by his grandfather, who emigrated from Italy in 1904. The butcher shop at one time had upstairs living quarters for the family, but about 10 years ago the family moved into a large, Victorian-style house about a block away. Mr. Angelino’s youngest brother once came back from college with ideas about expanding the business and marketing the family’s secret recipe for Italian sausage, but Mr. Angelino (the oldest son) decided against it because it would take too much time away from the family. He is fond of saying, “We are not rich, but we got a roof over our heads, food in our bellies, and each other. What more could we want?†This youngest brother is the only one in the family with a college education, and he is also the only one who scandalized the family by marrying a non-Catholic. Mr. Angelino uses his little brother as an example of the detrimental effects of “too much education.†Both Mr. and Mrs. Angelino come from large families; most of their brothers and sisters still live in the “Little Italy†section of this large eastern city. All grandparents are dead, with the exception of Mrs. Angelino’s mother (Mama). Mama lives in the home with them and is very frail. One of Mrs. Angelino’s brothers or sisters is sure to stop by nearly every day, bringing children, flowers, or food, for a visit with Mama. They often take Mama for rides or to their homes for short visits, depending on her health, and help with her basic care. Life with the Angelinos can be described as a kind of happy chaos. Kids are always running in and out of the butcher shop, where the older brothers and male cousins are often assigned small tasks in return for a piece of salami or some other treat. The old house is always full of children—siblings and cousins—from teenagers to toddlers. Children are indulged until they reach age 9 or 10, at which time they are expected to begin taking responsibility, which is divided strictly along traditional gender-role lines. Child care, cooking, and cleaning are accomplished by the women— older sisters or cousins, aunts, or mothers. Evening meals are a social event. There is nearly always at least one extended family member or friend at the table, and everyone talks about the events of the day, sometimes all at once, except when Mr. Angelino has something to say, at which point everyone stops to listen. Mr. Angelino is obviously a very affectionate father, but he expects his word to be obeyed. Bedtimes, rules about talking at the table, curfews, and other rules are strictly enforced. This situation is beginning to cause conflict with the oldest daughter, who wants to date and spend more t.
Mister Rogers on the Roots of Nurturing and the Untapped Role of Men in Profe...Michael Labay
Too little has been said and written about the role of men in child care. I feel that Rogers expressed his feelings on this issue so well that his published speech deserves wider promulgation. He not only deals with the roots of nurturing in all of us, but also with the need for men in professional child care as well as in education. To encourage greater participation by men in the teaching and caring professions, including nursing, salaries need to be adjusted so that men— as well as women—do not have to abandon such careers to achieve a reasonable quality of life for themselves.
The Role Of A Mothers Role In Society
Essay on A Caring Mother
Essay on The Influence of My Mother
Mother Definition Essay
Essay on Working Mothers
Essay On Mother Nature
Definition Essay On Mother
My Mother Essay
Essay on Appreciating Mom
The Angelino FamilyThe Angelino family has five children a.docxjohniemcm5zt
The Angelino Family
The Angelino family has five children and a sixth is on the way. The children are ages 14 (girl), 12 (boy), 10 (girl), 7 (boy), and 6 (girl). They all attend a nearby parochial school. Mr. Angelino owns a butcher shop that had been his father’s and that was begun by his grandfather, who emigrated from Italy in 1904. The butcher shop at one time had upstairs living quarters for the family, but about 10 years ago the family moved into a large, Victorian-style house about a block away.
Mr. Angelino’s youngest brother once came back from college with ideas about expanding the business and marketing the family’s secret recipe for Italian sausage, but Mr. Angelino (the oldest son) decided against it because it would take too much time away from the family. He is fond of saying, “We ain’t rich, but we got a roof over our heads, food in our bellies, and each other. What more could we want?” This youngest brother is the only one in the family with a college education, and he is also the only one who scandalized the family by marrying a non-Catholic. Mr. Angelino uses his little brother as an example of the detrimental effects of “too much education.”
Both Mr. and Mrs. Angelino come from large families; most of their brothers and sisters still live in the “Little Italy” section of this large eastern city. All grandparents are dead, with the exception of Mrs. Angelino’s mother (Mama). Mama lives in the home with them and is very frail. One of Mrs. Angelino’s brothers or sisters is sure to stop by nearly every day, bringing children, flowers, or food, for a visit with Mama. They often take Mama for rides or to their homes for short visits, depending on her health, and help with her basic care.
Life with the Angelinos can be described as a kind of happy chaos. Kids are always running in and out of the butcher shop, where the older brothers and male cousins are often assigned small tasks in return for a piece of salami or some other treat. The old house is always full of children—siblings and cousins—from teenagers to toddlers. Children are pretty much indulged until they reach age 9 or 10, at which time they are expected to begin taking responsibility, which is divided strictly along traditional gender-role lines. Child care, cooking, and cleaning are accomplished by the women—older sisters or cousins, aunts, or mothers. Evening meals are a social event. There is nearly always at least one extended family member or friend at the table, and everyone talks about the events of the day, sometimes all at once, except when Mr. Angelino has something to say, at which point everyone stops to listen. Mr. Angelino is obviously a very affectionate father, but he expects his word to be obeyed. Bedtimes, rules about talking at the table, curfews, and other rules are strictly enforced. This situation is beginning to cause conflict with the oldest daughter, who wants to date and spend more time with her friends from school. Mrs. Angelino .
The Angelino FamilyThe Angelino family has five children and a six.docxjohniemcm5zt
The Angelino Family
The Angelino family has five children and a sixth is on the way. The children are ages 14 (girl), 12 (boy), 10 (girl), 7 (boy), and 6 (girl). They all attend a nearby parochial school. Mr. Angelino owns a butcher shop that had been his father’s and that was begun by his grandfather, who emigrated from Italy in 1904. The butcher shop at one time had upstairs living quarters for the family, but about 10 years ago the family moved into a large, Victorian-style house about a block away.
Mr. Angelino’s youngest brother once came back from college with ideas about expanding the business and marketing the family’s secret recipe for Italian sausage, but Mr. Angelino (the oldest son) decided against it because it would take too much time away from the family. He is fond of saying, “We ain’t rich, but we got a roof over our heads, food in our bellies, and each other. What more could we want?” This youngest brother is the only one in the family with a college education, and he is also the only one who scandalized the family by marrying a non-Catholic. Mr. Angelino uses his little brother as an example of the detrimental effects of “too much education.”
Both Mr. and Mrs. Angelino come from large families; most of their brothers and sisters still live in the “Little Italy” section of this large eastern city. All grandparents are dead, with the exception of Mrs. Angelino’s mother (Mama). Mama lives in the home with them and is very frail. One of Mrs. Angelino’s brothers or sisters is sure to stop by nearly every day, bringing children, flowers, or food, for a visit with Mama. They often take Mama for rides or to their homes for short visits, depending on her health, and help with her basic care.
Life with the Angelinos can be described as a kind of happy chaos. Kids are always running in and out of the butcher shop, where the older brothers and male cousins are often assigned small tasks in return for a piece of salami or some other treat. The old house is always full of children—siblings and cousins—from teenagers to toddlers. Children are pretty much indulged until they reach age 9 or 10, at which time they are expected to begin taking responsibility, which is divided strictly along traditional gender-role lines. Child care, cooking, and cleaning are accomplished by the women—older sisters or cousins, aunts, or mothers. Evening meals are a social event. There is nearly always at least one extended family member or friend at the table, and everyone talks about the events of the day, sometimes all at once, except when Mr. Angelino has something to say, at which point everyone stops to listen. Mr. Angelino is obviously a very affectionate father, but he expects his word to be obeyed. Bedtimes, rules about talking at the table, curfews, and other rules are strictly enforced. This situation is beginning to cause conflict with the oldest daughter, who wants to date and spend more time with her friends from school. Mrs. Angelino is often sym.
Presentation by Val Gillies, London South Bank University, to The Uses and Abuses of Biology: Neuroscience, Parenting and Family Policy, 28 March 2014.
John Bruer Presentation to The Uses and Abuses of Biology: Neuroscience, Pare...ParentingCultureStudies
Presentation by Professor John T. Bruer, entitled 'Distortions of Neuroscience', to the conference The Uses and Abuses of Biology: Neuroscience, Parenting and British Family Policy, Friday 28 March 2014, Birkbeck, London University. Event organised by the Centre for Parenting Culture Studies, the University of Kent.
Presentation by Dr Jan Macvarish, entitled The Uses and Abuses of Biology: Neuroscience, Parenting and British Family Policy, given to the conference of the same name on Friday 28 March 2014, Birkbeck, London University. The conference was organised by the Centre for Parenting Culture Studies, the University of Kent.
https://bit.ly/BabeSideDoll4u Babeside is a company that specializes in creating handcrafted reborn dolls. These dolls are designed to be incredibly lifelike, with realistic skin tones and hair, and they have become increasingly popular among collectors and those who use them for therapeutic purposes. At Babeside, we believe that our reborn dolls can provide comfort and healing to anyone who needs it.
The Healing Power of Babeside's Handcrafted Creations
Our reborn dolls are more than just beautiful pieces of art - they can also help alleviate stress, anxiety, depression, and other mental health conditions. Studies have shown that holding or cuddling a soft object like a stuffed animal or a reborn doll can release oxytocin, which is often referred to as the "love hormone." This hormone helps us feel calm and relaxed, reducing feelings of stress and anxiety.
In addition to their physical benefits, reborn dolls can also offer emotional support. For many people, having something to care for and nurture can bring a sense of purpose and fulfillment. Reborn dolls can also serve as a reminder of happy memories or loved ones who have passed away.
Welcome to the Program Your Destiny course. In this course, we will be learning the technology of personal transformation, neuroassociative conditioning (NAC) as pioneered by Tony Robbins. NAC is used to deprogram negative neuroassociations that are causing approach avoidance and instead reprogram yourself with positive neuroassociations that lead to being approach automatic. In doing so, you change your destiny, moving towards unlocking the hypersocial self within, the true self free from fear and operating from a place of personal power and love.
Program Your Destiny eBook - Destiny University.pdf
Kent final
1. Who’s looking out for your children? Changes and continuities in British mothers’ and fathers’ experiences of parenting over half a century Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
2. Since 1969 I have witnessed a growing indifference from some parents to meeting the most basic needs of children, and particularly younger children, those who are least able to fend for themselves. I have also observed how the home lives of a minority but, worryingly, a growing minority of children, fails to express an unconditional commitment to the successful nurturing of children. Frank Field (2010, p. 18) The Foundation Years: Preventing Poor Children Becoming Poor Adults
3. Classic Sociological Collections and Studies Used Collection: Study Key topics and location: DENNIS MARSDEN Parents and Education 1961 parental decisions about education, resources and philosophies, United Kingdom Salford Slum Re-housing 1962 rehousing of slum population on central redevelopment estate and over-spill area, employment, working class family life, working class community life, Salford Mothers Alone 1965-66 divorced, separated, widowed and unmarried mothers and their children, national assistance, living standards, poverty, support networks: fathers, wider family and friends, Colchester, Huddersfield PETER TOWNSEND Katharine Buildings 1957-1962 social change, housing, urban communities, urban renewal, working class life, family life, community life, rented accommodation, tenants, tenancy, East London Poverty in the UK 1967-68 poverty, deprivation, employment, unemployment, disabled, family, one parent families, children, elderly, housing, household budgets, living standards, nutrition, health, United Kingdom
4. Sam had an accident that nearly killed him. A builder’s ladder had been left and some boys of around 10 and 11 were manhandling it when it fell over (or was pushed) and fractured Sam’s skull. It happened at 10.05 at night and he had to be rushed into hospital for a brain operation … From the newspaper accounts it appears that no blame can be pinned on anyone (although the original story was that the ladder had been pushed over deliberately perhaps).
5. With the little girl June she seems rather over protective…she takes June all the way to school which is quite a long way, possibly half an hour’s trip, just so that she can see her across the road ...
6. I’ll tell you the sort of thing when I was living with me husband. He didn’t want me to work. He didn’t mind me going out and helping an old lady that had heart trouble at night time, but he didn’t like me to work anywhere were there was any men. So, when he was out in the morning, and I had our Cynthia I used to put her to bed at 9 o’clock for her morning sleep. I used to kid myself that she was ready for a sleep at that time and I used to go off down the pub and clean for them for two hours, and then I’d rush off home. She’d always be asleep. And that’s how I used to do. The only trouble was, I used to have to go Sundays as well. So Sunday mornings, what I did, I used to get all the kids ready, put them in the pram, and go down past the pub and I’d nip in and do the cleaning for a bit, and Jack would take the pram down to Greenhead Park, and push it around and I’d join him there. That’s how me husband never found out.
7. Although poor parenting practices can cause damage to children of all ages, the worst and deepest damage is done to children when their brains are being formed during their earliest months and years. The most serious damage takes place before birth and during the first 18 months of life when formation of the part of the brain governing emotional development has been identified to be taking place…. If a child does not experience attunement, their development is retarded, and they may lack empathy altogether. ( Graham Allen 2011, Early Intervention: The Next Steps,17 )
8. They’re left to their own devices most of the day. Their mother sets them off in clean clothes in the morning, pushing the baby in the pram or walking him, and when it’s fine they’re out nearly all the time. William has a sleep ‘on the couch’ in the afternoon. William who’s two and very, very fat goes off by himself. I’ve seen him being wheeled and led off by other children (a neighbour’s child seems to take him for a walk) riding with a group of boys on a lorry cart. But usually there’s John or Mary to look after him. John sometimes has to stop in to mind William while his mother goes to the shops and both can be seen at the window standing on the couch.
9. ‘ I went down there and I cried, I begged and prayed for them to take them but they say ‘they’re your children, and you’ve got to bide by that’.
10. Oh, to think of children in one of them homes. Although they are very nice, I'm always meeting someone and she said, 'Don't be sorry for them, they've got seven pairs of different sorts of shoes, and they have two holidays a year, and at Christmas-time they are going for this trip, and that trip. They have a lot more than what ours have’.
11. The transmission of parenting skills from generation to generation has changed considerably, and while the middle classes can read the guide books, those with lower educational and social skills are finding parenting skills squeezed out as extended families reduce and more one parent households have smaller knowledge bases on which to draw….As a society, we seem to have reduced the standards of responsibility which we expect parents and households to meet when children are born. This has produced tacit acceptance (particularly from those who do not have to face the consequences) of many of the dysfunctional conditions least favourable to successful childrearing….. ( Graham Allen and Ian Duncan Smith 2008, ‘Good Parents, Great Kids, Better Citizens ’)
12. Historical Comparative Analysis of Family and Parenting: A Feasibility Study Across Sources and Timeframes Families & Social Capital Research Group Working Paper No. 29 Val Gillies and Rosalind Edwards www.lsbu.ac.uk/families/publications