The Gardener and the Carpenter published 9 Aug 2016 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Caring deeply about our children is part of what makes us human.
Yet the thing we call "parenting" is a surprisingly new invention.
In the past thirty years, the concept of parenting and the multibillion-dollar industry surrounding it have transformed child care into obsessive,
controlling, goal-oriented labor intended to create a particular kind of child and thereby a particular kind of adult.
In The Gardener and the Carpenter, the pioneering developmental psychologist and philosopher Alison Gopnik argues that
the familiar twenty-first-century picture of parents and children is profoundly wrong - it's
not just based on bad science, it's also bad for kids and parents.
Drawing on the study of human evolution and on her own cutting-edge scientific research into how children learn,
Gopnik shows that although caring for children is immensely important, the goal shouldn't be to shape them so they turn out a certain way.
Children are designed to be messy and unpredictable, playful and imaginative, and very different both from their parents and from one another.
The variability and flexibility of childhood allow them to innovate, create, and survive in an unpredictable world.
"Parenting" won't make children learn - rather, caring parents let children learn by creating a secure, loving environment.
- from the front jacket flap