Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Department of Education
CITY OF LA CARLOTA
MIDTERM EXAMINATION
BPE 7-2A
1. FALSE
2. TRUE
3. FALSE
4. TRUE
5. FALSE
6. TRUE
7. TRUE
8. TRUE
9. FALSE
10. TRUE
11. FALSE
12. TRUE
13. TRUE
14. TRUE
15. TRUE
16. TRUE
17. TRUE
18. TRUE
19. TRUE
20. TRUE
14 TYPES OF PARENTING
1. AUTHORITATIVE
Authoritative parents are parents, not friends, but they’re not shy about praising kids.
They’re firm but warm, holding high expectations but prepared to reward kids when
they’re met. This style tends to reinforce good behaviors and lead to positive, respectful
parent-child relationships.
2. AUTHORITARIAN
Authoritarian parents take rules seriously, and they want their kids to know it. They’re
not particularly warm, not keen on excuses and expect obedience. This style can lead to
a failure to bond emotionally as well as rebellious behavior, anxiety and delinquency.
3. PERMISSIVE
Permissive parents are enablers, but it comes from a place of genuine love. They want
their kids to enjoy their childhood, so they’re less likely to enforce rules and more likely
to provide toys and let bad behavior slide. This style can lead to a cordial parent-child
relationship, but also impulsive or materialistic behavior as kids get older.
4. UNINVOLVED
Uninvolved parents are either not present physically, emotionally or both, and they
don’t feel emotionally tied to their child’s wellbeing. They may be actively abusive to
their child or overlooking abuse in their surroundings. This neglect can have COUNTLESS
CONSEQUENCES.
INTENTIONAL PARENTING STYLES
5. ATTACHMENT
Secure for baby but demanding for parents, attachment parenting means co-sleeping,
sling carriers, and absolutely no crying it out. It’s all about a nurturing bond that keeps
parents and babies close, and can lead to greater empathy and compassion in kids.
6. GENTLE
Everyone makes mistakes, and gentle parents make it a priority to be understanding and
maintain a good relationship with their child. This style doesn’t have to be overly
permissive, plus it may help kids feel less hostile.
7. FREE RANGE
Hesitant to overprotect, free range parents don’t want to shelter their kids too much.
Within reason, they advocate letting them roam and encouraging their belief in their
own abilities. It’s great for fostering independence, but the obvious downside is the
potential for unsupervised mischief and unsafe situations.
8. SLOW
Life is hectic, and slow parents consciously decide to remove over-commitment, clutter
and invasive media from their kids’ lives. The goal is to give them plenty of time to
recharge and pursue their authentic interests, and it can encourage early self sufficiency
and confidence.
9. TIGER
Perfectionist is one way to describe a tiger parent, for whom success is not optional
Failure to meet or exceed expectations is punished with insults, threats and worse.
Children may be more disciplined, but are often at risk for verbal/emotional abuse.
10. GENDER NEUTRAL
Gender neutral parents prefer to allow their child to choose their gender identity
independently and may keep their biological gender a secret from non-family. Children
may be less likely to engage in stereotyping, but may feel confusion about their identity.
HARMFUL PARENTING STYLES
11. HELICOPTER
Just as the name suggests, helicopter parents hover around their children, poised to
protect them from any perceived “harm”. Even when they succeed, they deprive their
child of opportunities to learn and grow on their own. This can make children feel
hostile, embarrassed and/or overly dependent on parents.
12. SNOWPLOUGH
Whether they deserve it or not, the children of snow plough parents are getting the
best. Their parents will push their way into schools, events, plays, teams and
scholarships, taking away their child’s chance to earn things as well as their drive toward
personal accomplishments.
13. NARCISSISTIC
Often stemming from narcissistic personality disorder, narcissistic parents expect their
children to serve them on every level. Not only must they obey their parents’ every
whim, they may be the favorite one day and emotionally abused the next. This can lead
to emotional trauma, suicidal thoughts and other serious mental illness.
14. TOXIC
This parenting style is the hallmark of child abuse. Children may be neglected, their basic
needs going unmet.
4 TYPES OF PARENTING
1. PERMISSIVE PARENTING -Permissive parents are not demanding. Kids do not have many
responsibilities and are allowed to regulate their behavior and the majority of their choices. When a
parent is permissive, they look at their child as equal rather than children of a parent.
2. Authoritative Parenting - In this parenting style, the parents are nurturing, responsive, and
supportive, yet set firm limits for their children. They attempt to control children's behavior by
explaining rules, discussing, and reasoning. They listen to a child's viewpoint but don't always accept it.
4. Authoritarian Parenting - Authoritarian parenting is an extremely strict parenting style. It places high
expectations on children with little responsiveness. As an authoritarian parent, you focus more on
obedience, discipline, control rather than nurturing your child.
1. Gender Equality. - Gender equality is simply allowing both female and male to have equal
rights and opportunities in terms of political, economic and social. In a patriarchy society, women
tend get less opportunities than men for instance, labor force participation, endowment of
motherhood, protective legislation, and women’s legal status etc. Feminism wave movement
helped to succeed many rights for women and still fighting for more equal rights.
2. Gender Roles. - Gender roles are overrated and should be abolished, preferably today.
They are mean things that pushes all people in tight little boxes whether they fit or not and
punishes them when they dare to step out.
You should trust in your ability to cope with changes. If I know that I can deal with changes, if I
know that I can adapt to changes, then changes are not a bad thing. Unfortunately, way too many
people find their security in the certainties of their lives. They know what is worth knowing, they do
what they know well, they refer to “common sense” because the way their grandparents did it was
good enough for their grandparents so it is good enough for them, and nothing need to be changed
ever. These are the people who cling to the rigid gender roles (and are rigid an all-other way of
thinking too).