QuoteThe public wants, no, needs, to see helicopter moms as the growth stunting cause of silly food allergic children who should be weeded out by Darwinism anyhow. They need our kids to be three year old adults who can self-inject and shutter themselves in a corner keeping the disability hidden in order to not disrupt the darling 55-75 percentile who are bright, fully able, but not by standard deviations beyond the median.
In the first wave food allergies and anaphylaxis were an emerging problem dogged by ignorance that could be forgiven due to how novel allergic disease is. While not exactly kind towards fellow man it's understandable that society would hope it was temporary therefore a matter of short term inconvenience that would go away.
That game has changed from problematic to epidemic. I don't know about the rest of you but I don't need more correlative half-arsed psych evals by underqualified* individuals who don't bother to check themselves for bias or other flaws. I'm also out of passes to give lazy researchers who can't bother to understand this under the lens of disability without mitigating measures, without any medical device or substance for prevention.
Quote from: becca on November 09, 2014, 10:13:21 AM
Great minds, SL.
Quote from: becca on November 09, 2014, 09:47:02 AM
"The researchers didn't see any differences in requests for help among the five- and six-year-olds with and without allergies.
There were also no differences between the groups of kids in the number of indirect requests for help with the more difficult puzzle or the number of direct requests for help for either puzzle, according to the results published in the Journal of Pediatric Psychology."
So, where is the problem??
Quote from: SilverLining on November 08, 2014, 07:43:52 AMQuote from: PurpleCat on November 08, 2014, 07:23:14 AM
Clearly they weren't watching my child!
Maybe they were watching yours at five.QuoteThe researchers didn't see any differences in requests for help among the five- and six-year-olds with and without allergies.
If children at three and four there is a noticeable difference in them indirectly asking for help, maybe it's just that those parents are, overall, more engaged with their children. Because, apparently, a year later they are just as independent.
So....what's the issue?