There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly firm. Never hug and kiss them, never let them sit in your... Westerns: Making the Man in Fiction and Film - Página 309por Lee Clark Mitchell - 1996 - 331 páginasVista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro
| Steven Starker - 2002 - 216 páginas
...appropriately be raised without parental contact. in specifically designed institutions. As for his advice: There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them. bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly... | |
| 1994 - 188 páginas
...children be played with? If at all, in the moming or after the midday nap; never just before bedtime. " "There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they are young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be... | |
| Carol Magai, Susan H. McFadden - 1995 - 390 páginas
...in. Their digestion is interfered with and probably their whole glandular system is deranged, (p. 81) There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly... | |
| Howard K. Bloom - 1997 - 484 páginas
...repeated the concept emphatically in a book that became the child-rearing bible of the next twenty years: There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly... | |
| Robert Karen - 1998 - 516 páginas
...wrote: Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly firm. Never hug and kiss them, never let them sit on your lap. If you must, kiss them once on the forehead when they say goodnight. Shake hands with... | |
| Judith Rich Harris - 1999 - 486 páginas
...healthy infants. Since no one gave them to him, he took to telling other people how to rear their young. There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them, with care and circumspection. Let your behaviour always be objective and kindly... | |
| Graham Richards - 2002 - 392 páginas
...Watson (1928) is a rich source of material stating this in terms which now sound quite extraordinary: There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them and bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly... | |
| Glenda Mac Naughton - 2003 - 368 páginas
...behaviourist thinking in 1913, believed that children should be treated as adults. He wrote in 1928: There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behaviour always be objective and kindly... | |
| Willem Koops, Michael Zuckerman - 2003 - 336 páginas
...objective and impersonal management of children. He detested mawkish sentimentality and needless affection: There is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly... | |
| Claire Douglas - 2006 - 204 páginas
...well. John Watson, the eminent Harvard behaviorist, for example, was advising mothers in 1928 that there is a sensible way of treating children. Treat them as though they were young adults. Dress them, bathe them with care and circumspection. Let your behavior always be objective and kindly... | |
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