Witches of Emperor

Children today are being hastened through childhood, rushed into accepting adult tasks at a very early age. The effects can be profound and long lasting even though they are not so dramatic or so tragic. Parents are intelligibly eager to see their children succeed, but when that keenness turns into anxiety, parents may overburden their children, pushing them too hard, ahead of time. The process often starts innocently enough. For example, it is getting increasingly common for parents to enrol their young children in after school activities, arraying from sports to lessons in music or ballet, and often, exceptional tutoring is bestowed. Of course, it is not wrong to encourage the talents or interests of the child, but there is a danger of excess. Yes, there is, most especially when they carry too much burden like anxious adults. Time magazine mentions that kids who once had childhoods now have curriculums; kids who should to move with the lunatic energy of youth now move with the high aim of the worker bee. Parents want their children to attain goals and careers like musical and acting wonders. Even before their children are born, parents are already hoping that their future kids would improve their prospects of success that is why they enrol them in psychology degree online. In addition, some mothers enrol in prenatal universities that offer music education for babies still in the womb which aims is to stimulate their developing brains.   In some countries children are assessed for reading and math skills before they are six years old, but such practices have raised concerns about emotional damage. David Elkind, writer of the book The Hurried Child, notes that schools tend to mark children too quickly and too early; and they do so, Elkind argues, for management causes instead of for reasons related to the efficient teaching of children.


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