Synopsis
Analyzes the effects of today's changing society on children and the family, and describes what America must do to raise healthy children
Reviews
Poverty, divorce and drug abuse are some of the obstacles to raising healthy children in America discussed here by Carnegie Corporation president Hamburg, who handily summarizes solutions offered by recent research and programs. There are many good suggestions. Hamburg, a psychiatrist, stresses the need for support systems and an overhaul of younger adolescent education, and offers ways to improve prenatal care, day care, drug abuse prevention and sex education. But he goes over old ground when discussing such problems as the breakdown of the family. Few toes are stepped on in the book. Hamburg takes no stand on providing birth control and abortion counseling. This is a useful guide which could have been more daring.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
A sweeping overview of the institutions, programs, and social trends that affect how America's children grow up. President of the Carnegie Corporation, Hamburg has impressively broad credentials, including research and teaching stints at the National Institutes of Health, Stanford, and Harvard. And although the material he presents here is not new, its array of facts and statistics throws fresh light on the problems--and possible solutions--facing children, their families, and their schools. The 20th-century transformation of families, the workplace, and the community is seen as both revolution and evolution (although it seems to be an evolution stalled in class conflict). Hamburg concentrates on early childhood and early adolescence, the ages when, he believes, children are most vulnerable. Good health, he says, is a major factor in proper development; poor children suffer from the moment of conception onward because of inadequate prenatal care. The next major factor is adequate child care. Today, more than half of US households have both parents working full-time, and the number is growing. A society that ignores the implications of these numbers, Hamburg argues, saddles itself with day care that is merely ``safe storage'' and with latch-key children whose only recourse is TV. The author points out that adolescents begin as early as sixth grade to deal with drug abuse, including alcohol and cigarettes, and with pregnancy and serious injury or death from accidents; they find the greatest difficulty in the transition from elementary to junior-high school. Only a blending of government, school, community, and family resources can provide support for American children as they grow up, Hamburg says, citing the dozens of successful pioneering programs that work toward that blending. A solidly researched, nonconfrontational analysis that presents the facts and holds up solutions as a challenge to our democratic society. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Hamburg, psychiatrist, educator, and president of the Carnegie Corporation, outlines the vast social changes of the last 25 years (e.g., erosion of the family, widespread poverty, graphic violence on TV) and prescribes what the country needs to remedy the risks. He focuses on the unique needs of children under two years of age, as well as those in middle schools. His research is thorough, and Hamburg never despairs for the future of children and society as a whole. His book is as transforming as Robert N. Bellah's Habits of the Heart ( LJ 3/1/85) was for the last decade, and is sure to be read widely.
- Linda Beck, Indian Valley P.L., Telford, Pa.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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