Book Review - The Economist (U.K.)

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Click here for 4 book reviews of Helping Children Succeed.

Particularly recommended are –-


(1) Prof. Diane Ravitch’s Blog --

We studied Prof. Ravitch’s “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the School Privatization Movement” for our 6/17/2015 meeting, and Prof. Ravitch’s “The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education” for our 9/12/2012 meeting.

Diane Ravitch is N.Y.U.’s Research Professor of Education and a historian of education. In addition, she is a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education.


(2) The Psychology Today Magazine Review --

The author of the article is Claudia M. Gold, MD --

Harvard Medical School Professor associated with The Brazelton Institute of Boston’s Children’s Hospital.

Director of Early Childhood Social-Emotional Health Program at Newton-Wellesley Hospital.

An advanced scholar with the Berkshire Psychoanalytic Institute.

The author of, inter alia, Keeping Your Child in Mind: Overcoming Defiance, Tantrums and Other Everyday Behavior Problems by Seeing the World Through Your Child's Eyes (2011), The Silenced Child: From Labels, Medications, and Quick-Fix Solutions to Listening, Growth, and Lifelong Resilience (2016), and The Development Science of Early Childhood: Clinical Applications of Infant Mental Health Concepts from Infancy Through Adolescence (scheduled for release in time for Valentine’s Day 2/14/2017), she writes regularly for her blog, Child in Mind, on the Boston.com website.
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johnkarls
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Book Review - The Economist (U.K.)

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The Economist - UK -- 7/9/2016


Childhood Development – The Brain Game
Book Review Author Uncredited


After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the number of infants in Russian orphanages swelled. They had food, and they were clean and safe. But the staff were impersonal and cold, until researchers coached them in new ways: smiling at the babies, cooing, talking and other behaviours natural to parents. The results were striking. Infants did better on developmental tests and grew physically stronger, too.

For Paul Tough, a journalist, this offers two lessons about why some children thrive and others struggle. The first is that the emotional contexts in which children grow up are crucial, especially in their early years—“a remarkable time of both opportunity and potential peril”. Infants who are neglected or under-stimulated develop in different ways from those reared in loving homes. Hormones triggered by stress stunt brain development, making it hard to control behaviour and concentrate. The effects last: such children do worse in exams and earn less at work.

The second lesson, though, is that it is possible to mitigate the effects of adversity. In “Helping Children Succeed”, Mr Tough describes Attachment and Biobehavioural Catch-up (ABC), a programme in which coaches visit foster homes in poor parts of New York City. By helping foster parents become more attentive, ABC has helped children in care to reduce stress levels and improve their behaviour.

It is most cost-effective to act early to prevent infants turning into troublesome teenagers, but Mr Tough shows that policy can also help later on in childhood. He cites Turnaround for Children, a programme run in schools in New York, New Jersey and Washington, DC, by Pamela Cantor, a child psychiatrist. Turnaround trains teachers to make their classrooms more supportive and their classwork more engaging. Teachers are told how to defuse aggressive pupils, and are encouraged to set tricky team projects rather than drone on at the whiteboard.

Mr Tough’s book is one of many in recent years to argue that education policy in rich countries has emphasised academic skills while neglecting emotional and psychological development. His previous books, “Whatever It Takes”, about the Harlem Children’s Zone (a pioneering educational charity in New York), and “How Children Succeed”, pursue similar themes. Those books are better. “Helping Children Succeed” reads more like a succession of entries in a notebook than a new story worthy of a whole book.

Nevertheless, his message bears repeating. Too often, education policy zips from one fad to another, neglecting the deeper reasons why adversity leads to poor outcomes. Evidence-based early childhood projects are among the smartest ways to avert enduring poverty. Spending public money on infants can save taxpayers a lot of money later (on, say, job training and prison places). But such programmes must be rooted in scientific evidence and led by empathetic professionals who know what they are doing.

Too often they do not. Around the world, countries are embracing early-childhood projects, opening snazzy centres and dispatching home visitors. But too many projects are of poor quality. Mr Tough shows that it need not be this way. In doing so he points towards an entirely new meaning for the nanny state.

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