Barbara Coloroso is the author of the international bestseller Kids Are Worth It! and Parenting Through Crisis and is an acclaimed speaker on parenting, teaching, conflict, resolution, and grieving. Featured in Time, the New York Times, and on many radio and television shows, she lives with her husband in Littleton, Colorado.
I really appreciate Barbara Coloroso's healthy approach to discipline, rather than a punitive or a permissive approach. She explains different parenting styles, and why the "Backbone" approach is most effective. She addresses current issues facing our children in the digital/media age. She also addresses bullying, hazing and other damaging behaviors. Beautiful quotes are sprinkled throughout the book, as well as references to other pertinent books and articles. Coloroso promotes the values of caring deeply, sharing generously, and helping willingly to combat some of the muck and mire in this world. My only critique of this book is that Coloroso seems to reject "religion" as a place to find answers, and embraces a love for humanity at the end. My question to her is, without an encounter with Christ, how can we truly know love? God is love. He is the source of love, so to leave Him out is a mistake.
This is another interesting look at how Barbara Coloroso wraps parenting and ethical common sense into a neat little bestselling package. I did find this book useful, in that it allowed me to reflect on my own ethical practices. I have always believed that it is very important to be a role model for younger children, and in reading Coloroso's similar view I found myself reflecting on what I could do to demonstrate this empathy and sympathy to other children. I once again disagree with her idea that rewards and recognition are absolutely useless in achieving this goal, as extrinsic motivation can evolve to intrinsic motivation. Overall, this was a good book for both reflection and in exercising my critical thinking skills about the theories presented.
I wish I could give this a higher score, but it had too many examples of the negative, and not enough examples of the positive, nor did it provide many specifics of helping kids be ethical.
Wonderful Barbara C.-- she has written another one of those parenting books where I feel like I really could go back and have a crack at it and do a worthy job this time around... the parts about children being addicted to the internet today were quite disturbing, on the other hand. As a grandparent-at-a-distance, I feel quite helpless.
I recommend this to parents with kids from 0 through their teens.. worth reading and making notes and trying out in your family!
Barbara's Kids Are Worth It! is my go-to guide for reassurance and support in parenting. I don't think there's anything new in Just Because. As I got towards the end I wondered why it felt less satisfying than Kids- I think it is because it is more theoretical than practical. It certainly reinforces the messages in her other books, but I wonder if she intended it for a different audience.
Wonderful speaker, she came to our school to speak. Book is pretty much common sense stuff, tho, nothing particularly enlightening. Our culture is so unethical these days, it seems like an uphill battle trying to raise ethical kids.