English, asked by kaursukhleen893, 7 months ago

Nowadays parents put too much pressure on their children to be successful. According to you, is
negative or positive development? Write an article to express your views in 100-120 words.

Answers

Answered by fauziabegumansari
7

Answer:

It is true that children have overly enforced from the parents to achieve success in their life. There are several reasons for such approach of parents, which on the whole, I consider to be very negative.

Most parents have too much concern about the future career of their offspring. They think that being a successful person will bring a lot of opportunities for children. For example, most parents expect their children would become a doctor or engineer, and they can secure future jobs. As a result, children performance at school would be the main focus of parents to assess them and keep them in enormous study timetable to achieve higher exam score. Therefore, the wariness of better future might lead the forcible attitude of parents to their offspring.

However, I would argue that the above development has harmful effects on children. It can be both depressive and discouraging. Many parents tend to engage their children only for future achievements, and they omit the entertainment part of the youngsters. This could affect their mental wellbeing and cause of psychological sufferings. A recent survey shows that in Bangladesh, 20% of children suffer from various mental disorders due to lack of recreation. Similarly, rapid pressures from parents for same activities can raise procrastination on children, which might be obstacles to learn new skills. Thus, enforcing children to succeed could be detrimental for children’s mental developments.

In conclusion, though enforcement of parents might help to gain success of children, I believe that this could be psychologically disadvantageous for them.

Explanation:

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Answered by devyanshhgupta22
1

Answer:

here

Explanation:

It's healthy to want to bring out the best in your child. But sometimes, parents put children under so much pressure to perform well that their children suffer serious consequences.

Parents differ in their opinions about how much pressure kids need. In fact, a 2013 survey by the Pew Research Center found that 64% of Americans say parents aren’t putting enough pressure on children to do well in school.1  When kids don't get enough pressure from parents, they may be less likely to perform at their best.

Other adults insist kids are under way too much pressure. They express concerns that kids can't be kids anymore because they're constantly pressured to perform well so they get into the most prestigious schools or get the best scholarships.

Of course, school isn’t the only place where parents put pressure on kids. Some parents put pressure on kids to perform well in sports, music, theater or a vast number of other activities. High-pressure parents may insist kids practice constantly and perform well in competitions.

While high expectations can be healthy, placing constant pressure on children can be harmful. When kids feel like each homework assignment is going to make or break their future or that each soccer game could determine if they get a college scholarship, that pressure will have negative consequences.

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