Christine Gross-Loh
Goodreads Author
Born
The United States
Website
Twitter
Member Since
April 2008
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/christinegrossloh
More books by Christine Gross-Loh…
“in Japan, buying a lot of stuff for your children is considered indulgent. Wastefulness was frowned upon. Shopping bags should be saved to reuse many times, not recycled after one purchase.”
― Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us
― Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us
“Finnish education appears paradoxical to outside observers because it seems to break a lot of the rules. In Finland, “less is more.” Children don’t start academics1 until the year they turn seven. They have a lot of recess (ten to fifteen minutes every forty-five minutes, even through high school), shorter school hours than we do in the United States (Finnish children spend nearly three hundred fewer hours2 in elementary school per year than Americans), and the lightest homework load of any industrialized nation. There are no gifted programs, few private schools, and no high-stakes national standardized tests. Yet over the past decade, Finland has consistently performed at the top on the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), a standardized test given to fifteen-year-olds in nations around the world. While American children3 usually hover around the middle of the pack on this test, Finland’s excel.”
― Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us
― Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us
“young children are semi-divine, still partly rooted in the spiritual world and thus too young for discipline. Another belief is that babies are born pure11, untainted, and good—even superior to adults. For most of my Japanese friends, it was simply about believing that all children have basically good intentions and that we can best support them in their growth by holding age-appropriate expectations. People don’t curtail young children’s joy and exuberance because they don’t think they need to: children are who they are, not creatures who must be shaped and tamed. Parents”
― Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us
― Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us
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