Emotional Safeguarding: Exploring the Nature of Middle‐Class Parents’ School Involvement1 |
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Authors: | Catharine H. Warner |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology, University of Maryland, 2112 Art‐Sociology Building, College Park, Maryland 20742;2. e‐mail: . |
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Abstract: | Although discussion of parents’ school involvement generally surrounds academic success, there are also emotional motivations for parents’ school interventions. In this exploratory analysis, based on interviews with 21 parents and teachers, I show how these middle‐class parents’ concerns for children extend beyond grades and academic success to the children’s own emotional comfort with schooling. I discuss examples of emotional safeguarding, a parental practice to protect children’s happiness at school. Results also suggest that emotional and academic concerns for children at school are interrelated, and parents often approach the emotional with the academic in mind. Parents focus on reducing children’s anxiety or discomfort at school with the ultimate goal of instilling a love of learning. The parents in this study perceive an emotional route to achieving academic success for their middle‐class children. Unlike parents, teachers in the study identify parents’ concerns as academic or a product of parents’ anxiety. This research introduces the possibility that while parents’ academic concerns are very real, they are also accompanied by equal and occasionally greater concerns for children’s happiness and well‐being at school. |
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Keywords: | class education emotion parenting parent school involvement schools |
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