Synopsis
Noted child psychologist Sylvia Rimm, along with her daughters, a research psychologist and a pediatric oncology researcher, conducted an extensive three-year survey among more than one thousand satisfied women who have achieved success in their careers. She explored in depth these women's childhoods, adolescences, and young adulthoods, noting what the women had in common and culling from her findings important advice on how parents can give their own daughters the same advantages.
Based on extensive original research, See Jane Win provides invaluable advice for helping girls deal with such issues as middle-school grade decline, math anxieties, eating disorders, social and academic insecurities, feelings of being different, self-esteem and competition, the career-family balance, and the glass ceiling. Included are profiles of seventeen women in disparate careers that illuminate the rewards and penalties of linear versus delayed career patterns and show us the typical pathways for women in specific fields, including medicine, science, law, business, education, politics, and the arts.
Despite the many victories of the women's movement, little girls are still given negative messages about their potential and prospects. Dr. Rimm shows parents how to combat those messages and give their daughters the confidence and skills they need to follow in the footsteps of the successful women surveyed.
About the Author
Dr. Sylvia Rimm is the author of Why Kids Get Poor Grades; How to Parent So Children Will Learn; and Raising Preschoolers. A clinical professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, she is also the director of the Family Achievement Clinic at MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland and a contributing correspondent for the Today show.
Dr. Sara Rimm-Kaufman is a research psychologist at the University of Virginia who lives in Charlottesville.
Dr. Ilonna Rimm is a pediatric oncology researcher who lives in Boston.
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