Saturday, April 11, 2015

             So this week we talk about the sexualization of young girls/boys in our American society.  This has been a big concern for many teachers and parents for most of the last twenty years.  I think for me it was the Jean Bennett Ramsey case where the little girl was a rising baby beauty star who was murdered.  Now her status as a baby beauty star had nothing to do with her being murdered but when I saw the pictures and video of her performance and she was dressed up like an adult at three years old I was pretty shocked by it.  I have two daughters, they are both drop dead gorgeous.  But my rule was that kids will be kids and I didn't encourage any of the seemingly “normal” stuff other mom’s let their children do at an early age.  You could safely say I was that controlling mother who watched what my kids were exposed to.  We didn't watch much TV and it was PBS when we did, we read the classics and we did a lot of stuff out side.  My oldest daughter wanted to wear dresses all the time but they were dresses that were modest. We didn't go to see the latest Disney movie nor emulate the latest Disney Princess.  I made sure my sons had the proper sense of how to treat a girl or women. Respect them along with everyone else.   
       Time has passed.  My children are now adults and watch and wear what they want.  While I am not always thrilled with their choices I can’t complain much.  And as I watch TV and read magazines I am over whelmed by the blatant adds directed at tweens to adult women that make them think having long silky hair, a curvaceous figure and long eye lashes makes them a more desirable date.   In my teaching I have run into this in the early childhood classroom.  The main problem seems to be cloths.  One year the little girls had pants on so tight they couldn't sit down in them without being very uncomfortable.  I asked one of the other teachers if they had noticed all the little girls dressing this way and she said yes.  She told me it was the style and no one carried anything else in the girls department.  One child was so uncomfortable I asked her mother to start sending her in sweat pants so she would be able to sit still.  She tried it but soon went back to the “style” because the child had a fit to dress like everyone else.   
         Parents play their part in all this too.  They get sucked into the hype that is sold to their kids.  One of the couples I used to baby sit for dressed to look like Barbie and Ken dolls.  Their 3 year old daughter wanted to dress like mamma so she was dressed in rather revealing short shorts and middy tops. She also swung her hips side to side when she walked.   I think many young parents today try to make themselves feel good by buying the children the latest thing.   It is not a strategy that works well. 
         What it all comes down to is how we help our children find their true identity and it isn’t to be found in the perception others give us about ourselves.  “Identity is shaped from the outside but constructed on the inside.” (Derman Sparks & Olson Edwards 2009)  The messages we give to young children about their worth is very important.  I have met mothers who live vicariously through their daughters by dressing them in grown up out fits.  I have met mothers who think their daughters should be modest, in the homeschooling world this may mean denim skirt, white blouse and white tennis shoes. Modest and practical.   What children truly need is a relationship with their parents that is trusting and honest.  Like the young boy in the reading So Sexy So Soon (Levin & Kilbourne 2012) who was able to talk freely to his mother about the love notes he was getting in fourth grade.
          Parents who are willing to take the time to build a trusting relationship with their child can help them navigate the tough stuff they will encounter in the media soaked culture we live in.  As a parent of both sons and daughters I know it is a fine line we walk.  Not to let them be too precocious and not to be too strict.  The issue is not about sex or sexuality but sexualizing or objectifying a person.  “Both boys and girls are routinely exposed to images of sexual behavior devoid of emotions, attachment, or consequences. They learn that sex is often linked to violence. And they learn to associate physical appearance and buying the right products not only with being sexy but also with being successful as a person.”  Levin & Kilbourne (2009).  When the foundations are laid in this manner children run a much greater risk of engaged in risky behavior. 
         Focusing in this issue in the early learning years can help families build strong relationships and more confident children therefore stronger and more confident tweens, teens and young adults. 

Derman – Sparks, L & Olsen Edwards, J. Anti-bias education for young children and ourselves.  
              Washington, D.C.: National Association for the Education of Young Children. (NAEYC)

Levin, D. E., & Kilbourne, J. (2009). [Introduction] So sexy so soon. The new sexualized childhood and
          what parents can do to protect their kids (pp. 1-8). New York: Ballantine Books. Retrieved



4 comments:

  1. Hi Linda, I really enjoyed reading your Blog! I couldn't agree more that what children watch on television and see in magazines plays a significant role in providing children with the ideas about what it means to be a girl or boy. I think what bothers me the most is how the media is providing this narrow definition of gender that focuses on appearance. I like you have a daughter who loves to wear dresses and wear lip gloss...but that is where it stops for me. My daughter is only 11 years old and there are times when I have to pause for a moment and remind her that she is only 11. She going to graduate from grade six this year and yesterday we went shopping for a dress and shoes. We found the dress!!! Then came the task of finding age appropriate shoes...she wanted heals...I wanted flats...she wanted heals....I wanted flats. She tried on the ones that she wanted and then we talked about how she was only 11 and that the shoes she "LOVED" were not appropriate for someone who was only 11. We compromised to a little wedge...and then came home with a dress and shoes!
    When children are young they should be engaged in age appropriate activities like riding their bikes, collecting worms and rocks, and playing outside with their friends and wearing clothes that are age appropriate. The media is making children grow up too fast by using sexual content to sell products.
    As educators it is our role to model appropriate clothing and provide age appropriate materials in our environments. I agree with you that we also need to have open discussions with families regarding this issue.

    Thank you for sharing!
    Take care,
    Stephanie

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  2. Hello,
    You made a comment about a little girl who swung her hips from side to side when she walked; I see that every single day at school. Little girls are imitating elder girls or teens from TV, their style the way they walk and speak. I have a toddler who enjoys looking at herself in the mirror and she strokes her hair and makes ‘kissy’ faces with her lips. I have another toddler who likes to pick her shoes in the morning according to her outfit. It is astonishing how little children are growing so fast with the modern world. “When people are sexualized, their value comes primarily from their sex appeal, which is equated with physical attractiveness. This is especially damaging and “problematic to children and adolescents who are developing their sense of themselves as sexual beings” (Levin, & Kilbourne, 2009, p. 4). Children are still figuring their identity and self, as adults, we must do our best to guide them and direct them in a direction where they feel safe and protected. “It is totally normal for children to go through a gradual process of coming to understand sex and sexuality, caring relationships, and intimacy” (Levin, & Kilbourne, 2009, p. 4).

    Referene
    Levin, D. E., & Kilbourne, J. (2009). [Introduction]. So sexy so soon: The new sexualized childhood and what parents can do to protect their kids (pp. 1-8). New York: Ballantine Books. Retrieved from: http://dianeelevin.com/sosexysosoon/introduction.pdf

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  3. Linda,'

    There are a number of things that I agree with in this post. I am a firm believer in a child needing to be a child until it is time to act as an adult, young adult adolescent etc. Me being a young mom, I see many of the mothers my age or younger wearing vey revealing clothing in front of their children. I am not saying that they should not dress as they please, but children do not need to dress like their mothers and mothers should not dress in skimpy clothing around their daughters and especially not their sons. It sets a bad example for the daughters as far as how to attract a man/future husband and what a man should be attracted to for their sons. Thanks for your thorough post.

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  4. Linda,
    thank you for your insightful post!
    you have a sensitivity in the way that you write which I enjoy.
    Keeping our kids young for as long as we can is the best thing you spoke about. We have our entire lives to be apart of grown up situations. Let them be children.

    Mitchell

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