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What Should Children Learn? Americans' Changing Socialization Values, 1986-2018. | LitMetric

What Should Children Learn? Americans' Changing Socialization Values, 1986-2018.

Socius

Department of Sociology, University of Toronto, 725 Spadina Ave., Toronto, ON M5S 2J4 Canada.

Published: October 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how American socialization values for children have shifted since the mid-1980s, focusing on whether hard work or self-expression has become more emphasized.
  • Analyzing data from General Social Surveys between 1986 and 2018, the findings show that the preference for hard work has increased due to economic uncertainty, while self-expression values like autonomy have declined.
  • Despite the focus on hard work, there's still a stable valuing of compassion, and the decline in valuing obedience suggests changing parenting approaches influenced by socioeconomic factors.

Article Abstract

Assessing changes in socialization values for children provides a unique window into how Americans perceive the landscape of their society. We examine whether, since the mid-1980s, Americans (b) emphasized survival values, like hard work, for children as economic precarity rose, or (a) prioritized self-expression values, like autonomy and compassion, as expected in postindustrial society. Analysis of 1986-2018 General Social Surveys ( = 23,109) supports the precarity thesis: preferences for hard work increased steadily whereas preferences for autonomy, the top-ranked quality throughout the period, declined. There was some indication of enduring self-expression values, as support for compassion increased and its relative importance to hard work stayed stable. Decomposition analyses show valuing hard work would have been even greater without demographic changes like an increase in college graduates. Aligning with earlier research, valuing obedience in children continued to decline. Our results extend theoretical work on complexities of socioeconomic links to parenting values.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6853620PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2378023119879016DOI Listing

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