Betsy Hart is a countrywide syndicated journalist for the Scripps Howard News Service. She is prominent for writing about intellectual and family issues. The books she published were all top hit. She appeared on Fox news and other advertisements. I am truly engrossed and would love to read more about her.
The style of writing I believe is evocative and simple. In the article, Betsy is standing up for parents and demanding them to take responsibility for their choices as a parent. She empowers parents by helping them distinguish the flaws in leaning on too much "expert" direction and dismissing our own understanding of how to raise our children.
It provides the reader the potency to say no to the current parenting experts. It essentially communicates to the reader that no one knows their children better than them and its okay for the parents to make the decisions that are right for their family. Betsy Hart asks the reader to look at parenting as a mission to rescue your child's heart. She wants parents to liberate their children's heart from the negative influences of civilization as a whole. She doesn't clobber everything in American Culture. She is not anti-public schools or television. She does place the conscientiousness on the parents to make the decisions about how to deal with whatever schooling choice they make. It's up to the parents to decide what they want their children to watch and how much. Nothing new in this book, it is basically straightforward. The book is not heavy on child psychology vernacular. It's written in a very simple and straightforward style.
I concur with the article because I can narrate to that. I believe that parents should be held accountable for the mistakes that their children caused. Parents are so afraid of making any mistakes with their children that they end up succumbing to the culture of "pushover parenting". Although she stresses that parents follow their instincts the more imperative message is that parents should be on a rescue mission for their children's hearts. In other words, parents ought to train their children to do the right thing because it's the right thing and not to do the right thing only to evade castigation or other negative consequences. There's a big disparity and rescuing our children's hearts in this way not only trains them to be more honest, but also develops their characters to truly see right and wrong. She stresses this point in almost every chapter. So much contemporary parenting advice may get results, but does not address the heart. It's obvious that Betsy Hart is a Christian, but she wrote this book for a general audience. The results she's looking for go well beyond just good behavior. Everything Betsy talked about pretty much sums up what I want to accomplish with my children. I want them to learn the right etiquette and mind-set to be successful in life.
The style of writing I believe is evocative and simple. In the article, Betsy is standing up for parents and demanding them to take responsibility for their choices as a parent. She empowers parents by helping them distinguish the flaws in leaning on too much "expert" direction and dismissing our own understanding of how to raise our children.
It provides the reader the potency to say no to the current parenting experts. It essentially communicates to the reader that no one knows their children better than them and its okay for the parents to make the decisions that are right for their family. Betsy Hart asks the reader to look at parenting as a mission to rescue your child's heart. She wants parents to liberate their children's heart from the negative influences of civilization as a whole. She doesn't clobber everything in American Culture. She is not anti-public schools or television. She does place the conscientiousness on the parents to make the decisions about how to deal with whatever schooling choice they make. It's up to the parents to decide what they want their children to watch and how much. Nothing new in this book, it is basically straightforward. The book is not heavy on child psychology vernacular. It's written in a very simple and straightforward style.
I concur with the article because I can narrate to that. I believe that parents should be held accountable for the mistakes that their children caused. Parents are so afraid of making any mistakes with their children that they end up succumbing to the culture of "pushover parenting". Although she stresses that parents follow their instincts the more imperative message is that parents should be on a rescue mission for their children's hearts. In other words, parents ought to train their children to do the right thing because it's the right thing and not to do the right thing only to evade castigation or other negative consequences. There's a big disparity and rescuing our children's hearts in this way not only trains them to be more honest, but also develops their characters to truly see right and wrong. She stresses this point in almost every chapter. So much contemporary parenting advice may get results, but does not address the heart. It's obvious that Betsy Hart is a Christian, but she wrote this book for a general audience. The results she's looking for go well beyond just good behavior. Everything Betsy talked about pretty much sums up what I want to accomplish with my children. I want them to learn the right etiquette and mind-set to be successful in life.