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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. With adversity serving as the cornerstone of their social, cultural, political and religious existence, African-Americans reflect a people who have long fought to survive against racial discord. Doing so has infused within them a strong sense of self and determination that continues to be passed down through generation after generation by way of childrearing. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCAFAmChild.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
racial discord. Doing so has infused within them a strong sense of self and determination that continues to be passed down through generation after generation by way of childrearing.
According to Dr. Jeffrey Gardere, Ph.D., author of Smart Parenting For African Americans: Helping Your Kids Thrive in a Difficult World, "African American children face many imposing threats in
todays world -- academic failure, drugs, gangs, irresponsible sex, and attraction to crime, among others. For the parents of these children, it takes knowledge, effort, and caring to effectively
deal with such tough issues" (p. PG). The customs and habitual ways of behaving around the particular life stages of development when compared
between American and African-American young reflects upon how the former have assimilated into American society and tradition. While African-Americans still follow much of their own heritage when it comes
to raising children, there is still a considerable amount of multicultural influence that has become a part of the process. Pinderhughes (1989) notes how the pressures to adopt such
uniformity "existed on every level of the American social system" (p. 2) throughout the twentieth century, which one can readily surmise is what ultimately gave rise to modern-day sameness when
it comes to childrearing. Particularly evident of this is how attitudes of a dominant American culture are incorporated into the concept of bringing
up the young. Remaining strict and relying upon formality, African-American girls are not treated the same as their male counterparts. Typically, boys receive more freedom than do the
girls, which is not so different from other ethnicities. It is easy to see how females begin to receive the discriminatory treatment when they are young and impressionable.
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