Unequal Childhoods Book Review

Superior Essays
Unequal Childhoods is a book by Annette Lareau. It looks in the lives of 12 different families to study how class impacts children and how their parents raise them. The working/poor-class and middle-class families acted as the focus of the study. In addition to economic class, she made sure to have multiple races represented as well. There were at least two Black middle-class families that she studied, and two white working/poor-class families. Race was not the only factor that she wanted variety with, there was difference in the amount of children a family had and the parent structure as well. Two kids, in both economic classes, were only children, others had two or three other siblings. However, all the middle-class families studied had both …show more content…
Concerted cultivation is a term associated with the middle-class; this is how the parents are choosing to raise their children. It involves organized activities, taking adult instruction and critiques, and develops a sense of entitlement within these young children. Middle-class children feel as though they can make their preferences heard, question authority figures, act comfortably in institutional settings, like the doctor’s office, and have a sense of control over situations involving adults (Lareau, 2011, p. 6). The other term, accomplishment of natural growth is paired with the working/poor-class families. This term refers to how children lounge around for long periods of time, they do not have every other hour of their day planned like middle-class children. The calendar is not a central piece in their lives or their parents’ lives. They are not in contact with adults as much when they do participate in activities because it is child-directed play, and there is no sense of entitlement that develops. Rather it is mistrust and distance from institutions that comes out. Children do not make commands, question authority figures, or direct a situation in any institutional setting or at home. There are clear boundaries that children follow without question. There is also a …show more content…
First is that concerted cultivation is the child-rearing method preferred by institutions. However, not every family can afford to spend $4,000 alone on one child’s activities in one year. Parents of the working/poor-class have a huge distance and distrust of institutions because of this. They begin to feel too inferior and inadequate to understand what’s going on in their child’s classroom. Although some working/poor class families could “give a piece of their mind” to the landlord, they were practically dead silent in the doctor’s office or at back to school night (Lareau, 2011). The second takeaway is that middle-class family time happens in the car from activity to activity. Going along with that, the higher the mother’s education is, the less likely it is that the child will have contact with relatives (Lareau, 2011, p. 340). Family is just not a part of the middle-class life like it is for working/poor class. Also the sense of entitlement that develops can do more harm than good. Kids of concerted cultivation do not learn that they cannot get everything they want because they can afford it; like in the case of the Marshalls. The talented-and-gifted program did not accept Stacey and her sister based on their own merit at first. It was Mrs. Marshall, their, mother, that paid $200 to have her daughters tested privately, they eventually gained admittance into the program. Lareau points out that once

Related Documents

  • Superior Essays

    Rios Masculinity

    • 1138 Words
    • 5 Pages

    “The Consequences of the Criminal Justice Pipeline and Latino Masculinity” is a research paper in which minority youth in Oakland, California are studied in order to determine the effect of heightened policing techniques on gendered practices. The author is able to make conclusions based on observations made while doing field research and interviews. Rios’ main argument is that the enhanced policing, surveillance, and punitive treatment of youth of color facilitate the development of gendered practices. Essentially he is saying that minority youth, mainly males, experience more of a police presence, and that causes them to have different views on masculinity than individuals who do not experience increased police presence. He describes this…

    • 1138 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Equalizing School Funding

    • 1914 Words
    • 8 Pages

    “Many children of middle and upper class neighborhoods are given the material and intellectual resources that will allow them to obtain high social status, solid employment, and wealth; many other children are denied this privilege because…

    • 1914 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    In The Matthew Effect it mentions that parents around a middle class income are more involved with their children, while parents who are poor let their children grow on there…

    • 272 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The second chapter of Our Kids: The American Dream In Crisis, written by Robert D. Putnam, talks about how families affect people’s future lives. Although family affects the outcomes of people’s lives, class is also greatly influences the family factor. Regarding the influence of family experiences on people’s future lives, it seemed that the enhanced close-knit families allow for a grander success in life. Andrew was raised in a very caring environment where his family ate dinner together at night, and they talked to each other in order to keep up to date on what goes on in each other’s lives. Andrew’s parents’, Earl and Patty, live their world revolving around their kids in hopes of giving their children the right amount of attention…

    • 621 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Working-class families were characterized by “separation”, as parents believed that education was the teacher's responsibility and compared school as something that happened between the hours of nine to five (separate from home life). Presents would seek little information about their child, rarely attended parent-teacher conferences or school Open House and focused criticisms on non-academic matters. Mothers were solely responsible for monitoring school activities and parents socialized more with their kin groups. In comparison, the relationship between the school and the upper middle-class families were characterized by “interconnectedness”, as parents believe that education is a shared responsibility between teachers and parents and attempted to practice the curriculum at home. These parents were well-informed and did not hesitate to criticize school and teacher performance.…

    • 939 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In the novel, Overachievers: The Secret Lives of Driven Kids, author, Alexandra Robbins, argues that it is not good for the students to be under an extreme amount of pressure in school and I certainly agree with this statement. Parents are often the ones who place an excessive amount of pressure on their children to succeed, even starting before they are born. This pressure that parents place on their children can lead to immoral behavior, such as cheating. The overachieving students may come across as perfect on the outside, but by having so much pressure placed on them to be perfect, they may get into a mindset where they focus too much on comparing their standardized test scores and GPAs with other students’, causing them to be left feeling…

    • 1092 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The speaker uses rhetorical situation in order to persuade his audience. In the lecture, ‘’Our kids – The American Dream in Crisis’’, Dr. Robert Putnam talked about his book which is about the opportunity gap between the upper class and lower class children in America, and how differences in national, state, politics, class, and race are impacting the American dream. Putnam thinks, upper-middle-class children have opportunities to do well, while lower-class children are often set up for failure. Putnam talks how segregation by family wealth and parental education plays a critical role in determining long-term success of kids.…

    • 475 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Annette Lareau, in her book “Unequal Childhoods”, explains her belief that parents from different social classes raise their children in different ways. She does this through her observations and studies with select families from upper middle class to the poor lower class. She states that the working and lower class families use a method that she refers to as “accomplishment of natural growth”. From my experience, Annette Lareau’s thesis was accurate as I have grown up in a working class family and am now raising my children in a working class and I find I can confirm many of her findings.…

    • 861 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The beginning of Chapter 3 lays out the three main factors that are associated with the relationship between exceptional parents and the classroom. These parents over the years have provided many beneficial changes because they would advocate for their children 's’ disabilities. Educators also seek parental involvement because studies show that a student’s grades tend to improve when the parents are actively involved with helping their student academically at home. The positive results that come from both statements above links to the judicial mandates that require parents to be informed and involved with their student’s education. The goal once again is to make sure these students have as much resources as possible to help them learn the curriculum.…

    • 797 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Inequalities In America

    • 1049 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The income gap limits the opportunities of the working class and widens the advantages of the richest Americans. Upper-class Americans can afford an increasing amount of extracurriculars for their children that allow them to get ahead start at a very young age. According to an article in the Atlantic, between the 1990s and the 2000s, the gap between money spent on children in higher classes and lower classes has only grown (Garland). As a result of decreasing incomes, families in the lower half of income distribution have to spend less on their children than previously (Garland). Now more than ever success in education and in life is based on assistance and financial support.…

    • 1049 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Who you are, what you know, and who you know can significantly can impact your education experience and how you interact with larger society. In Unequal Childhoods, Lareau explains how families social class and race lead to them having different parenting styles, which lead to the families having different interactions with other adults, siblings, educators, and medical officials. I agree with Lareau 's case about the parenting styles have an impact on how families and children interact with larger society. Lareau 's argument on how parenting and childhood vary by social class is strong because she explores many different families from different social classes and races. Lareau observed from two elementary schools and interviewed with 88…

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In Gregory Mantsios’s “Class in America” he discusses the myths and realities of class differentiation. One thing he jumps into in the beginning of his essay is that Americans don’t prefer to talk about social class. Some people have even stated that they dislike using the word ‘class’ or ‘upper-class’ due to the reason that they believe it mows down their fortune and responsibility. Even though some Americans are concentrated on class identification Mantsios writes that most people aren’t aware of their actions to avoid this subject, this may be because of the fact that “…Class identity has been stripped from popular culture” (Mantsios, 282). It is now deemed ‘un-American’ to even compare certain issues with classes.…

    • 828 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Class Differences

    • 932 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In concerted cultivation parents have a more hands on approach, they place their child or children in social activities such as sports, clubs, or play dates and also have them involved in educational benefits such as tutoring. The authors of Are Class Differences in Parenting Style Disappearing?,…

    • 932 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    She points out the ideas that middle and lower class families have of language, activities, and interactions with institutions. These values that families hold correlates with the two parenting philosophies that Lareau identifies different social class families choose to utilize. Throughout her study, Lareau discusses concerted cultivation in middle class families, where parents play an active role in their children’s development. Lareau points out that in poor families, natural growth is the philosophy that parents use, where children have more freedoms and spend most of their time free of adult…

    • 1445 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Bourdieu claimed that the family is the basic unit of the society whereby it carries out a pivotal role in the maintenance of social order (Silva 2005:88). Parents are our first teachers in life and they expose us to many cultural practices. From there, people are introduced and familiarized to their parents’ cultural capital through family socialization whereby certain values and dispositions are transmitted into them. Again, every family has different habitus based on their class which creates social inequalities. For example, higher-class families expose their children to certain cultural activites such as reading and attending enrichment programs to equip and prepare their children before entering school.…

    • 1241 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays

Related Topics