Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD

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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD

Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD

@FoodieScience

author of @NYTimes best seller HUNT, GATHER, PARENT https://t.co/63gQAudHz1 | mental health correspondent @npr | phd @ucberkeley | @caltechalumni

30.3585° N, 103.6610° W Katılım Temmuz 2012
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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD
Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD@FoodieScience·
In #Maya culture -- “everybody has a purpose. ..One goal of social interaction is to help everybody fulfill their purpose” (Barbara Rogoff) "Even toddlers have a purpose?" (Me) "Even little children." (Barbara Rogoff)
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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD
Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD@FoodieScience·
YES INDEED! This is not a solo endeavor or spectator sport. Everyone benefits from family, neighbors and friends helping kids.
Ned Johnson@NedJohnson

Sounds like alloparentinv to me. ⁦@FoodieScience⁩? “@Surgeon_General⁩ said that a pro-family America would also require a cultural change — one that envisioned #parenting as a societal good, and therefore the responsibility of the whole society” nytimes.com/2024/09/14/ups…

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Darby Saxbe
Darby Saxbe@darbysaxbe·
As a champion ignorer of my own kids and an enemy of programmed childhood "fun," I wrote a piece for @NYT on why underparenting can reduce parental stress and boost kids' resilience. Down with fun, up with boredom! nytimes.com/2024/09/15/opi…
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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD retweetledi
Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD retweetledi
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ISMAIL@iamaniku·
1/ Michaeleen Doucleff: What You Need to Teach Your Kids If You Want Them to Be Successful Adults youtu.be/KXIxDTw1SFU?si… @FoodieScience #7Takeaways 1. Western parenting has veered off course, often neglecting children's core needs and the parent-child relationship. Many common Western parenting practices are unique and potentially detrimental. 2. The TEAM approach (Togetherness, Encouragement, Autonomy, Minimal interference) offers an alternative parenting style based on observations of traditional cultures. 3. Children have an innate desire to help and contribute. Parents should welcome and encourage this from an early age rather than pushing children away from household tasks. 4. Excessive praise is a recent Western phenomenon and may not be necessary or beneficial. Instead, focus on allowing children to contribute meaningfully and feel intrinsically rewarded. 5. Autonomy is crucial for child development. Parents should aim to provide children with increasing levels of independence appropriate to their age and abilities. 6. Technology use, especially screens and social media, poses significant challenges for modern parenting. It's important to set boundaries, delay introduction when possible, and educate children about the impacts of technology. 7. Parental actions and choices, even subtle ones, transmit values to children. Parents should be mindful of what their behaviors are communicating about priorities and values.
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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD retweetledi
Lenore Skenazy
Lenore Skenazy@FreeRangeKids·
It begins! In Oak Park, IL, 55 parents are banding together to give their kids more freedom in the real world. “I am so much more concerned about what happens on the internet than I am about what happens at the park,” one said. You can do this too! oakpark.com/2024/05/24/oak…
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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD
Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD@FoodieScience·
This beautiful family is so inspiring! I have been trying to find my relationship with my mom more rewarding and joyful and I am so grateful to the Almance family for showing me how it's done <3 Definitely #goals
ℒℴѵℯ ∞@addistgeb

This really hit me today @FoodieScience . I’ve always observed the joy among Latino families so this does not surprise me one bit! Definitely #goals!!! Creating a sibling bond is so crucial 🥹 npr.org/sections/goats…

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Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD retweetledi
Lenore Skenazy
Lenore Skenazy@FreeRangeKids·
IRONY ALERT! @FoodieScience, author of the great "Hunt, Gather, Parent," sent Rosy, 7, out to ride her bike...and the COPS BROUGHT HER HOME. Here's part of the extraordinary interview Michaeleen Doucleff did with @JonHaidt: MD: How do you give children more independence when our law enforcement, our neighborhood and our communities aren't used to it? JH: Parents need to act collectively: Step 1: We need to change laws in states to make it explicit that giving your kids independence cannot be taken as evidence of neglect on its own. We've already passed that law in eight states [Utah, Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Virginia, Connecticut, Illinois and Montana]. It's being considered in many others. Step 2: We then have to change group-level norms. And we can do that with what's called the Let Grow Experience. You encourage your elementary school administrators to download the materials from Let Grow [a nonprofit organization that Haidt co-founded to foster childhood independence]. That material gives teachers instructions for assigning kids a specific type of homework. Teachers tell children, "Go home, talk with your parents and find something ...you've never been allowed to do before. Something you think you can do by yourself." MD: Like going to the store on their bike a few blocks away? JH: Exactly. Children agree with parents on what the task is. And then the child does this type of assignment once a month for six months. The brilliant part of this challenge is that it changes the norms. Before you know it, it's normal to see an 8-year-old carrying a quart of milk. It's normal to see a 9-year-old on a bicycle — that's how you change the norms. READ THE WHOLE INTERVIEW HERE. INCLUDES LINK FOR YOU TO A "KID LICENSE" FOR YOUR OWN KIDS: npr.org/sections/healt…
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