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Paperback How to Father a Successful Daughter: 6 Vital Ingredients Book

ISBN: 0449002608

ISBN13: 9780449002605

How to Father a Successful Daughter: 6 Vital Ingredients

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

HOW TO FATHER A SUCCESSFUL DAUGHTER reveals, step by compassionate step, how a father can provice high-quality parenting for his daughter, promote self-esteem and confidence that will take her through... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Fathers Breed Success

Child development psychology does provide evidence that fathers involvement in their daughters lives have a noticeable positive effect on life outcomes. Having a father around does a service to a daughter. Children growing up in single-parent households are at a significantly increased risk for drug abuse as teenagers. --Source: Denton, Rhonda E. and Charlene M. Kampfe. "The relationship Between Family Variables and Adolescent Substance Abuse: A literature Review." Adolescence 114 (1994): 475-495. Adolescent females between the ages of 15 and 19 years reared in homes without fathers are significantly more likely to engage in premarital sex than adolescent females reared in homes with both a mother and a father. --Source: Billy, John O. G., Karin L. Brewster and William R. Grady. "Contextual Effects on the Sexual Behavior of Adolescent Women." Journal of Marriage and Family 56(1994): 381-404. A survey of 720 teenage girls found: 97% of the girls said that having parents they could talk to could help reduce teen pregnancy. 93% said having loving parents reduced the risk. 76% said that their fathers were very or somewhat influential on their decision to have sex. --Source: Clements, Mark. Parade. February 2, 1997. Among teenage and adult populations of females, parental divorce has been associated with lower self-esteem, precocious sexual activity, greater delinquent-like behavior, and more difficulty establishing gratifying, lasting adult heterosexual relationships. It is especially intriguing to note that, in these studies, the parental divorce typically occurred years before any difficulties were observed --Long-Term Effects of Divorce on Children: A Developmental Vulnerability Model Neil Kalter, Ph.D., University of Michigan, American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 57(4), October, 1987

Worth Reading

This book is not specific only to the fathers; both parents should consider the material carefully. The main issue of this book is that we by ourselves are diminishing our daughters' abilities by upkeeping the dogmas about women that we've inherited from our parents. Examples of such beliefs are that girls are not good in sciences like math, are never possessing the necessary skill or talent to become a skilled professional in traditionally male (and thus higher paid) occupations. The differentiation of professions by gender is a dogma by itself. The beginning of the book is quite noteworthy, the middle of it seemed to me to consist repetitions of previously said and kind of dull, but the ending of the book seemed deserving attention again. The advises or the book couldn't be equally applied to all the cultures. Being an American author, Nicky Maroon had exposed the American gender gap that is deeper than it is in Russia, where Soviet Power since the beginning of 20th century took many efforts to gain the complete equality and liberty of women. Just estimate Lenin's publications on the status of women, or judge Olympic results. Former East Germany, the Soviet Union, and the Former Communist Bloc dominated women's running in the 70s and 80s, taking nearly 70% of the final placement points in those two decades in Olympic and world championship races.

Great for dads and others!

I wish all fathers would read this

Wow, what a result. Recommended for every father.

I am a father of a healthy, beautiful, self confident 10-year old girl, in part due to the guidance of this book. I read this book in 1989, when our daughter was one. It's been 9 years of sustained enthusiam, constant "I love yous", attention to every success my daughter has had and reinforcement in those sometimes difficult periods. The result is a self-confident, centered, outgoing and adventursome girl. So far so good. We'll see how the next 8 years develop.

Why do girls give up on math, chess, and science?

Marone, a high school math teacher, has done an excellent job of addressing the positive role that fathers have in preparing girls for success in many fields.The book is also for mothers, teachers, and coaches trying to understand why a sudden shift in interest away from "science subjects" affects so many girls--and what we as adults can do about it.I'm a scholastic chess coach. (I'm also female, and a successful tournament player.) My elementary clubs run about 50/50 boys and girls. By junior high, the female participation drops to 25% or lower.None of the books I'd read about social development helped me as a teacher understand why this was occurring and what to do about it. We already had positive role models, a supportive school environment, good early training. We knew the girls COULD play chess--and so did they. The question was, why DIDN'T they?Marone's book, a gift a friend received for Father's Day, opened my eyes. Although not described as a book for teachers, this book was tremendously helpful to me.I recommend it to the parents (male and female) of all my students, and to many other teachers as well.--Duif Calvin, author of "A Guide for Chess Fans and New Tournament Players," website http://www.jaderiver.com/chess
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