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Caught between Common Sense and Science: The Cornell Child Study Clubs, 1925–45

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Julia Grant*
Affiliation:
James Madison College, Michigan State University

Extract

A 1930 report of a rural New York Child Study Club meeting conveys the dubiousness with which many mothers have regarded using books to raise babies. In the words of the group's secretary: “One mother, at a certain point in the discussion, quoted, half in fun, the much-abused ‘Spare the rod and spoil the child,’ adding, That's in the book.’ (We have had quite a bit of fun about things being or not being ‘in the book.”) ‘Oh, but that's in the old Book,’ some made answer, and to that another said, ‘I guess you have to mix the two!”” This ironic dialog highlights women's ambivalence and confusion about the use of the “book” in child-rearing and about the sources of expert advice which have contended for authority in the child-rearing enterprise. Before the twentieth century, mothers who raised “baby by the book” were often ridiculed, with the assumption being that the care of children constituted common knowledge; however, in this century, middle-class mothers have avidly consumed child-rearing manuals. American parents have been inundated with baby books, from the free Infant Care pamphlets dispensed by the U.S. Children's Bureau in the early decades of the century to Dr. Benjamin Spock's 35-cent paperback Baby and Child Care, which was distributed to millions of mothers by physicians and nurses in the 1940s and 1950s.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1994 by the History of Education Society 

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References

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4 Earlier scholarship, such as Ehrenreich, Barbara and English's, Deirdre For Her Own Good: 150 Years of the Experts’ Advice to Women (Garden City, N.Y., 1979), has tended to assume that there is a relationship between expert advice and women's behavior. Mechling, Jay E. chastises historians for assuming that there is a relationship between prescriptive advice and parental practices in “Advice to Historians on Advice to Mothers,” Journal of Social History 9 (Fall 1975): 44–63.Google Scholar

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21 The most influential of John, B. Watson's works include The Ways of Behaviorism and, especially, Psychological Care of Infant and Child (New York, 1928). Another popular behaviorist of the period was Thorn, Douglas A. who authored several Children's Bureau pamphlets and wrote many child-rearing texts, including Everyday Problems of the Everyday Child (New York, 1929). On Watson and behaviorism in the 1920s, see O'Donnell, John M., The Origins of Behaviorism: American Psychology, 1870–1920 (New York, 1985); Birnbaum, Lucille C. “Behaviorism in the 1920's,” American Quarterly 7 (Spring 1955): 15–30; and Buckley, Kerry W. Mechanical Man: John Broadus Watson and the Beginnings of Behaviorism (New York, 1989). Two Cornell faculty members, Waring, Ethel B. and Wilker, Marguerite also published their own prescriptive text utilizing behaviorist principles, which was often used in study groups, entitled The Behavior of Young Children (New York, 1929).Google Scholar

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