Let's be a little more definitive
on what moms can do to raise women who will achieve self-sufficiency in
adulthood. The following list is compiled from research studies conducted by
Dr. Sylvia Rimm (based on 1,000 successful women) and information from Sondra
Forsyth, author of Girls Seen and Heard (Putnam, 1998).
You might be interested to know
that in Dr. Rimm's study, 83 percent of the mothers of these high achievers
were home full-time when their daughters were of preschool age. By the time
they entered high school, 67 percent of these girls' mothers had established
careers outside the home.
Based on Dr. Rimm's findings and
those reported by Forsyth in her book, here is a comprehensive list of things
you should do to nurture high achieving women:
- Provide a healthy
example.
- Allow your
daughter to see fully who you are.
- Show your
daughter that you are proud to be a woman.
- Make sure
you give your daughter as much direction and time as are given to sons.
- Help your
daughter to discover the things she likes to do, wants to try to do, and
doesn't like to do.
- Reinforce
how wonderful and worthy your daughter is of her own life.
- Allow your
daughter to be her own person.
- Let your
daughter be free to make her own solid choices.
- Help your
daughter to remain strong and happy through the period of adolescence by
holding onto a strong self-image.
- Try to
focus on her strengths, intelligence, and problem-solving ability; don't
dwell on her inadequacies.
- Encourage
your daughter to develop dreams, focusing primarily on those that are
obtainable.
- Help her
to develop traits that are considered primarily masculine
traits—assertiveness and proficiency in math and science—that will help
her in life.
- Make sure
your daughter stays productive, not idle and wasteful of time.
- Encourage
your daughter to speak up for herself and not let her back off from
difficulties.
- Encourage
your daughter to be realistic about her strengths and weaknesses.
- Help her
to bounce back after the unexpected.
- Teach your
daughter to find the value in qualities that separate her from others or
make her different.
- Teach your
daughter to familiarize herself with women who are active, productive
contributors.
- Encourage
her to seek leadership opportunities.
- Be
determined for both of you to think outside the box.
- Set high
educational expectations.
- Make
education a high priority and stress the need for her to stay academically
challenged.
- Teach your
daughter it's possible to be smart without being the smartest.
- Introduce
many and varied activities into your daughter's life and help her learn to
balance them.
- Encourage
competitive activities.
- Broaden
your daughter's horizons through travel.
- Stress the
unimportance of popularity and the value of independence from peers.
- Help your
daughter to see the value in creativity, challenges, and contributions.
- Be
opened-minded about your daughter's career path, whether it is traditional
or nontraditional.
- Encourage
your daughter to select a mate who will respect her choices.
Family Education.com
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