by Ada Anbar (Author)
How do you raise happy and well developed children in these confusing times?This book discusses contemporary issues of women's concerns about motherhood, career and children, during the early formative years of life.The book's objective is to help women make informed decisions about these important topics, which have life long implications for their and their children's lives. Basic questions facing all young women today are debated. Is it important to have children today, when women can have fulfilling lives without motherhood? Should every American woman strive to become a mother? What is a good age to have children? And what about the work/family balance? The book also discusses the basic needs of young children for optimal development in their physical, social-emotional, and mental aspects of growth. A full chapter is devoted to a novel solution how to ameliorate the current conflict between motherhood and career. Major themes in this book are: Breastfeeding; Language development;Memory skills; Brain stimulation and growth; Discipline, and the Mother-Child bond. Other topics discussed include: Attachment and Children without Conscience; the Issue of Daycare; whether Marriage is Necessary for Children's development; The Power of Love; The Declining Birthrate in the Western world; Teen Pregnancies, and more. No other book covers in one volume and at this level of depth the very basic needs of young children for optimal development, as well as the needs of today's mothers, most of whom also carry the main responsibility for raising their kids.
Author Biography
Biography Ada Anbar holds a Ph.D. in early childhood education and is the author of parenting books. In addition to The Drama of The Mother-Child Bond, she wrote How to Choose a Nursery School: A Parents' Guide to Preschool Education, and The Secret of Natural Readers: How Preschool Children Learn to Read. Before writing full time, Dr. Anbar was adjunct professor of early childhood at the University at Buffalo, and a consultant on early childhood education. She formerly taught in university preschools, including the renowned Bing Nursery school of Stanford University, the ECRC (Early Childhood Research Center) of the University at Buffalo, and in elementary schools in Israel. Dr. Anbar received her education at the University of Chicago, Stanford University, and the University at Buffalo, where she acquired her Ph.D. degree. She lives with her husband, Dr. Michael Anbar, in Fountain Hills, Arizona, near one of their sons and two grandchildren.