criticism, if not calling it sin
[email protected]
<<As a cosleeping, attachment parenting mom I thought I had it all figured
out until my first child turned 2. Suddenly, everything fell apart and I didn't
know where to turn. The AP advice just didn't work anymore - then I found this
book! Though I didn't agree on every point, the basic philosophy makes sense
- and works! It's a breath of fresh air not to be at the mercy of my 30 month
old any more. Rosemond gives moms permission to take charge, to teach and
discipline their children.>>
From a book review of
A Family Of Value
by John Rosemond
Average Customer Review:
Mass Market Paperback (October, 1995)
list price: US$12.95 -- our price: US$10.36
(price subject to change: see help)
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France
Same page, negative review of a book on Christian unschooling:
<<Take, for instance, a case appropriate for the Christian audience. A child
might love the great heroes of the Bible, earnestly researching their lives
and tales, while at the same time showing no desire to ever understand or pursue
doctrinal knowledge. Certainly no parent would want that to continue. The
hole in the unschooling model is that there are few ways of remedying this lack
without moving outside of unschooling. Therefore, as a philosophy unto itself,
it fails. Other examples that find the chinks in the armor abound.>>
http://www.gggg.com/best/books/372QPTZA3895G.html
out until my first child turned 2. Suddenly, everything fell apart and I didn't
know where to turn. The AP advice just didn't work anymore - then I found this
book! Though I didn't agree on every point, the basic philosophy makes sense
- and works! It's a breath of fresh air not to be at the mercy of my 30 month
old any more. Rosemond gives moms permission to take charge, to teach and
discipline their children.>>
From a book review of
A Family Of Value
by John Rosemond
Average Customer Review:
Mass Market Paperback (October, 1995)
list price: US$12.95 -- our price: US$10.36
(price subject to change: see help)
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France
Same page, negative review of a book on Christian unschooling:
<<Take, for instance, a case appropriate for the Christian audience. A child
might love the great heroes of the Bible, earnestly researching their lives
and tales, while at the same time showing no desire to ever understand or pursue
doctrinal knowledge. Certainly no parent would want that to continue. The
hole in the unschooling model is that there are few ways of remedying this lack
without moving outside of unschooling. Therefore, as a philosophy unto itself,
it fails. Other examples that find the chinks in the armor abound.>>
http://www.gggg.com/best/books/372QPTZA3895G.html