Concerted cultivation

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    Concerted cultivation means that parents try to make their children more talented by enrolling them in organized activities. Meanwhile, natural growth is letting children play with the other children in the neighborhood instead of organized activities, but not always by choice. My childhood was shaped by concerted cultivation. When I was growing up, my parents enrolled me in many organized activities to do during my free time. I did soccer, basketball, softball, track, gymnastics and Girl Scouts

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    Assignment 2 Concerted cultivation means that parents try to make their children more talented by enrolling them in organized activities. Meanwhile, natural growth is letting children play with the other children in the neighborhood instead of organized activities, but not always by choice. My childhood was shaped by concerted cultivation When I was growing up, my parents enrolled me in many organized activities to do during my free time. I did soccer, basketball, softball, track, gymnastics

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    working-class and poverty level families accommodate those last minute plans with ease. Parenting styles in American families is what Annette Lareau addresses in Unequal Childhoods: Class, Race, and Family Life. Lareau identifies middle-class families as concerted cultivators, mothers and fathers that dominate their children’s lives with established, controlled and organized activities intended to give them experiences that

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    The two different styles of parenting that are described in the book are concerted cultivation and natural growth. Concerted cultivation is typically seen in the middle class families. Whereas natural growth is mainly seen in the working class families. The book defines concerted cultivation as having “Organized activities, established and controlled by mothers and fathers…” (Lareau, 2011, p.1). And it defines natural growth as having “children experience long stretches of leisure time, child-initiated

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    parenting styles are being used by both parties—middle and working class. There are two widely adopted parenting styles between the middle class and the working class. For the middle class, a known parental style that is often seen is concerted cultivation. Concerted cultivation can be defined as parents who have the means to afford and uphold a certain life style in order for their child is able experience and foster hidden and unhidden talents with in them through the outlet of participating in activities

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    Summary: Unequal Childhoods Class, Race, and Family Life Annette Lareau, author of Unequal Childhoods Class, Race, and Family Life, revealed her research findings in this enlightening text featuring twelve socially, economically, and culturally diverse families having a child nine to ten years of age respectively in their nuclear family unit. These families were garnered from the author’s coinciding study comprised of eighty-eight children. Lareau, along with her research assistants, visited each

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    For children, they are affected the most because at a young who they associate themselves with have a greater influence on how they may develop. Tyrec Taylor, an African-American child living in a working class family, is not being raised in a concerted cultivated environment. His growth is that of a natural method due to the fact that his mom does not have time to develop a plethora of activities for him to participate in, especially when she is the caregiver and the “bread-winner” of a family

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    kids. She also brought a name for this phenomena called “Concerted Cultivation”. While the middle class or rich parents take control of the leisure time of their children, the

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    I have recently finished reading *Outliers* by Malcom Gladwell and I personally consider the book to be a piece of idiosyncratic brilliance. As I read chapter after chapter I have put some thought into the idea of intelligence and what it is that makes some more successful than others. Though I will have to say that success is subjective, not only measured by the amount of dollars in a bank account, the number of assets, or degrees, yet these are measures generally use as indicators of success given

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    Everyone aims to fulfill the American Dream, achieving prosperity through hard work. Society loves the ideology that anyone can become successful and that we all have the same opportunities and chance of success, if enough work is applied. With this ideal, people can blame their failure on not working hard enough or having an adverse life. However, Malcolm Gladwell sees success in contrast to the common people. Gladwell believes that success is mainly caused by having the right opportunity and circumstances

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