Raising Children In a New Culture - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Raising Children In a New Culture

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In this style of parenting children fallowed the rules of ... Brick wall family Jellyfish family Backbone family Brick Wall Authoritarian Parent Parents demand ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Raising Children In a New Culture


1
  • Raising Children In a New Culture

2
Challenges for parents
  • Weather
  • Language learn English
  • Find a place to live
  • Find a job
  • Go to school

3
Challenges for parents
  • Parents want to keep their culture - food and
    customs. Children want to eat pizza and
    Macdonalds like their friends.
  • Children adapt faster than their parents.

4
Challenges for parents
  • The culture in Canada is not familiar. It is
    sometimes difficult to understand.
  • Family members are not here to help you.
  • Parents must do many things - take care of
    children, cook,
  • clean, grocery shopping AND work at a job.

5
Challenges for parents
  • Disciplining children in Canada is different than
    in the home country.
  • Children have rights. Parents do not understand
    the laws in Canada.
  • Children have too much freedom. Parents feel
    they do not have control.
  • Parents worry about their childrens safety.

6
Challenges for Parents
  • Do parents have rights in Canada?
  • Parents have the right to set limits for their
    children.
  • Parents have the right to make rules for the
    family.
  • Parents have the right to teach their culture to
    their children as long as their beliefs do not
    break the law in Canada.

7
Challenges for Parents
  • What are parents responsibilities in Canada?
  • Parents are responsible to
  • look after their children until they are 18 years
    old
  • provide food and clothing
  • provide a safe home for their children
  • make sure children go to school

8
Challenges for children
  • Language learn English
  • School is different
  • Children are lonely no friends
  • Bullying at school

9
Challenges for children
  • Children are growing up in 2 cultures.
  • Children want to please their parents.
  • They also want to be like their
  • Canadian friends.
  • Children may think they do not belong
  • to either culture.

10
Values
  • Values are beliefs that are very important to us.
  • We want to teach these values to our children.
  • People can have different ways of seeing the same
    thing. It doesnt always mean that one person is
    wrong.

11
What do you see?
12
Values
  • Our values can change when
  • we get new information,
  • our belief or value does not help us in the new
    country, or
  • we learn a new way to do something.

13
Changing Values / Adaptation
  • Adapting to a new culture change.
  • Change happens slowly little by little.
  • Keep some beliefs from your culture.
  • Choose some beliefs from Canadian culture.

14
Find a balance between 2 cultures.
your culture
new culture
Take the good things from your culture and
Canadian culture.
15
Discipline and Punishment
  • Discipline is NOT the same as punishment.

16
Discipline
  • Setting rules and limits for children
  • Listening to children
  • Solving problems with children
  • Setting a good example for children

17
Discipline
  • Discipline teaches children how to behave well.
  • Discipline teaches children how to change
    behaviour.

18
Examples of Punishment
  • Hitting or spanking
  • Using physical force
  • Calling the child names
  • Making the child feel bad about himself or
    herself (put downs)
  • Threatening the child
  • Yelling or screaming at the child

19
Punishment
  • Punishment makes children afraid.
  • Punishment does not teach children to change
    behaviour.

20
What kind of family are you?
  • (Barbara Coloroso)
  • Brick wall family
  • Jellyfish family
  • Backbone family

21
Brick Wall Authoritarian Parent
  • Parents demand absolute obedience.
  • Parents control their children no discussion.
  • Children are afraid of being punished.
  • (Brick Wall)

22
Brick Wall (Authoritarian)
  • There can be an emotional distance between
    parents and children.
  • Children may rebel (drugs, alcohol, sex). This is
    a way of getting back at parents.
  • Children do not learn how to make good choices.

23
Jelly Fish Permissive Parent
  • Parents do not set any rules for their children.
  • Children do whatever they want.
  • Children are confused, because they think no one
    cares.
  • (Jelly Fish)

24
Jelly Fish (Permissive)
  • Children do not feel connected to their family.
  • Teenagers may use drugs or alcohol or join a gang
    to be with friends.
  • Teenagers may have a boyfriend or girlfriend to
    feel loved.

25
Backbone Authoritative Parent
  • Parents care about their childrens behaviour.
  • Parents set rules for their children.
  • Parents teach children how to think - not what to
    think.
  • (back bone)

26
Backbone (Authoritative)
  • Children help make the rules. Parents are the
    final authority (the boss of the family).
  • Children understand the rules, so they are more
    willing to accept them.
  • Children can help decide what happens if they do
    not follow the rules.

27
Remember
  • No one can be a backbone parent 100 of the time.
  • You can be a backbone parent most of the time.

28
Communication
  • Communication is how we talk to each other.
  • Every culture has their own way of communicating.
  • Some ways of communicating help us have better
    family relationships.

29
Communication
  • Roadblocks
  • Serc 2009

30
Roadblocks to communication
  • Lecture or judge
  • Talk and not listen
  • Criticize think we are always right
  • Point a finger at the other person
  • Serc 2009

31
Effective Communication
  • Two-way communication
  • Listening is important
  • Serc 2009

32
The Chinese characters for listen
  • ?

33
The Chinese characters for listen

?
eyes
ear
undivided attention
heart
34
To Listen

35
Eye contact
  • Eye contact means looking at a persons eyes
    when you are talking to him or her.
  • Do people in your culture make eye contact when
    they talk to each other?
  • What does eye contact mean in your culture?

36
Eye contact
  • In Canada eye contact is a good thing.
  • Eye contact means I am listening to what you
    say.
  • Eye contact means I care about you.

37
Effective Communication
  • ? Two-way communication
  • ? Listening is important
  • ?
  • The Chinese characters that make up the
    verb to listen tell us something significant
    about this skill.
  • Serc 2009

eyes
ear
Undivided attention
heart
38
Being a parent is an important job.
  • Children and parents learn together.
  • Try to understand your childs adaptation.
  • Ask your child
  • How does it feel to grow up in Canada?

39
Being a parent is an important job.
  • As a parent, you constantly learn more and more
    about your children.
  • Talk about your values and beliefs.
  • Set family rules together.
  • Talk about behaviour that is acceptable.
  • Praise your children when they behave well.

40
Parent child relationship
  • The relationship between parents and their
    children is important.
  • Do not reject your child. If you do, your child
    may find connection with groups that put your
    child at risk of harm.

41
Parent child relationship
  • Parents and children can work together to solve
    the challenges of adapting to a new culture.

42
Parent-child relationship
  • Ask yourself
  • What is more important? Keeping everything
    from my culture or making some changes to keep my
    family together?
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