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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper that offers up a summary of The Hurried Child by David Elkind. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JA7_RAhurc2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
seem all but obsessed with making sure their little children are masters of language and skills. They push these children, showing them off and claiming how skilled they are on
the computer, at various languages, at reading, when they may only be 4 years of age. This is also something people can note when watching television as well, demonstrating the
reality in society. This is just a part of what David Elkind, in The Hurried Child, speaks of in his work, illustrating how parents, along with society, schools, and technology,
push children to become more than they are normally capable of at early ages. The following paper presents a summary of the work by Elkind. David Elkinds The
Hurried Child: A Summary This book is divided into two sections. The first section is titled Our Hurried Children and the second section is titled Hurried Children: Stressed Children. There
is, in the first section, chapters such as They Dynamics of Hurrying: Parents, as well as The Dynamics of Hurrying: Lapware, Brain Research, and the Internet. In the second section
there are chapters such as Learning to Be Social and Helping Hurried Children. In one of the chapters from the first section
of the book the author speaks of schools and society, technology and parents as they all push children in many ways. In a statement about schools the author notes how,
"Unhappily, the overtesting of children in public schools has become more extensive than it was even a decade ago. In some communities even kindergarteners are given standardized tests" (Elkind, 2001;
x). This sense of pressure on children all across the nation is something that can well be felt as children are pushed.
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