This may be one of those things for which there isn't truly an answer.
I watched this interview with Erica Komisar, who strongly advocates for attachment theory. She suggests that an appropriate amount of time to be physically away from a child is their age - so no time for a baby, 1h for a one year old, 2h for a 2 year old etc. She cites the studies that show high cortisol in daycare children and suggests that this harms brain development- causing adhd, anxiety and depression that may not manifest into teen years (making it difficult to study). Her book is called 'Being there'.
On the other hand there are twin studies that show outcomes for identical twins raised apart are almost... identical. This suggests that parenting, within an acceptable norm (ie parents that would be selected as appropriate for adoption), doesn't matter long term. Therefore daycare v mothercare doesn't matter long term.
I understand that there are many different studies showing many different things, and all these studies seem to have flaws (eg the bowlby study is on severely neglected infants, the twin studies cannot really isolate parenting choices like daycare v not, there is 'the nurture assumption' that concludes that peer group influence children more than parents, while ignoring that parents can influence peer group)
Anyway I've read all these books and feel no closer to forming an opinion as to what is best. What is your take on it? Any studies that you believe to be most robust? I am trying to decide on things like family size and whether I should to stay home with the under 3s for the sake of their mental health or if it would be wasted toil (I do love them but would prefer to work part time, which requires travel about once a month). I'm trying to stay objective.
Here are the views from the two extremes (evolutionary psychology v psychodynamic) v evolutionary psychology
also Dr Bryan Caplan, economist, who believes genes account for about 80% of outcomes, and that even private school and neoptism wears off about age 40.
and a link to psychodynamic therapist ans Attachment theorist Erica Komisar who thinks mothers need to be there for the first 3 years
I watched this interview with Erica Komisar, who strongly advocates for attachment theory. She suggests that an appropriate amount of time to be physically away from a child is their age - so no time for a baby, 1h for a one year old, 2h for a 2 year old etc. She cites the studies that show high cortisol in daycare children and suggests that this harms brain development- causing adhd, anxiety and depression that may not manifest into teen years (making it difficult to study). Her book is called 'Being there'.
On the other hand there are twin studies that show outcomes for identical twins raised apart are almost... identical. This suggests that parenting, within an acceptable norm (ie parents that would be selected as appropriate for adoption), doesn't matter long term. Therefore daycare v mothercare doesn't matter long term.
I understand that there are many different studies showing many different things, and all these studies seem to have flaws (eg the bowlby study is on severely neglected infants, the twin studies cannot really isolate parenting choices like daycare v not, there is 'the nurture assumption' that concludes that peer group influence children more than parents, while ignoring that parents can influence peer group)
Anyway I've read all these books and feel no closer to forming an opinion as to what is best. What is your take on it? Any studies that you believe to be most robust? I am trying to decide on things like family size and whether I should to stay home with the under 3s for the sake of their mental health or if it would be wasted toil (I do love them but would prefer to work part time, which requires travel about once a month). I'm trying to stay objective.
Here are the views from the two extremes (evolutionary psychology v psychodynamic) v evolutionary psychology
- evolutionary psychologist Dr Doug Lyle who thinks children just need their basic needs met and genes will take care of the rest
also Dr Bryan Caplan, economist, who believes genes account for about 80% of outcomes, and that even private school and neoptism wears off about age 40.
and a link to psychodynamic therapist ans Attachment theorist Erica Komisar who thinks mothers need to be there for the first 3 years