Chapter 8 psych Flashcards - Quizlet parents are low in their attempts to control their children and in their demands for mature behavior; parents are easygoing and unconventional; permission accompanied by high warmth and support; children less competent in school but high in social behaviors
A Child’s Life in the 1930s Compared to Today | Childrens . . . The life of a child in the 1930s was very different than a child’s life today With the Great Depression, children and their families were greatly impacted—millions lived in poverty and had very little to eat, let alone money to spare for entertainment
Historical Essays: The Twentieth-Century Child A Second World War complicated matters, though; sending fathers to the Front and mothers to work, or at home tending younger children while those siblings who could were required to support the family
Greatest Generation Grows Up: American Childhood in the 1930s . . . Stories of newsboys and bootblacks, Mexican students who contested segregation, and children who pleaded with Eleanor Roosevelt to help keep their families from starving bring this history to life, making it a perfect text for courses on the history of childhood
The Role Of Family Life In The 1930s | ipl. org “Fewer children were being born, and the size of the typical American family shrank to the smallest of any decade,” Prior to the events of the 1930s, American families were relatively large but, because parents were not able to support their family as easily, their size dropped greatly
What were families like in the 1930s? – MassInitiative These include: cohabitation, single parent, extended, and same-sex families What was it like being a kid in the 1930s? The 1930’s were the years of the Great Depression in America Children and their families were gravely impacted; millions living in poverty – mainly in the southern states
On the Doorstep: Parenting in the 1930s - Blogger Parents were, even in the 1930s, put out by the amount of time and resources local schools asked of their children, and worried that teachers' homework demands were taking up too much precious family time