Childhood changed. The aim of this task is to check whether the childhood has changed in the past 40 to 50 years. In this work we interviewed a 9 year old African-American woman and a 54-year-old African-American woman. In my interview, I found that childhood experienced tremendous change. Due to their priorities, morality and values have been diminished. On the contrary, as more children are raised in their parents' house, the pressure is rising sharply. In this article, I introduced these fundamental areas: family history, school, friends, and extracurricular activities.
The nature of childhood has changed. In the past twenty years, the childhood of the United States moved to the room and brought mental and physical harm to today's children. Adverse effects of reduced outdoor activity include doubling the rate of childhood obesity (costs related to our healthcare system reaching hundreds of billions of dollars), creativity, attention and social skill declines. Connecting children naturally brings important health benefits. Research shows that outdoor hours help children to become thin and strong, increase imagination and attention, reduce aggression, and improve classroom performance. In addition, children who often spend time in nature are proved to be better environmental managers.
Characteristics of childhood are constant exposure to new development tasks. As kids acquire new physical and cognitive skills and experiences, their behavior changes. They explore, practice and experiment, and as a result they change and change. The resulting behavior is both a manifestation of its health and its serious impact. At each new touch, the child can respond in various ways to release various reactions among his or her caregiver and other people around him.
Childhood is a constantly changing social phenomenon with concern. From a cross-cultural perspective, it shows various childhoods all over the world and warns us of disturbing or criticizing people who live and understand in different ways than we do .
Arrival of age is a transition from infancy to adulthood. Various factors may affect the maturity of the role. This affects character's character and ethics. In The Outsiders by S. C Hinton, the main character Ponyboy changed a lot from the beginning to the end of the book. His adulthood has greatly changed his character. At the beginning of the book, Ponyboy is quiet and weak. He admits, "I am quiet around people, even gangs" (page 12). When I was with a friend of Greaser, he did not even like talking. He is also very different from regular Greaser. Grease is seen as a rude and tough uneducated hooligan. Pony boy is very smart, both scores A and B are stable. He is a pacifist and does not want to fight Socs. In the confrontation with the Soc group, he refused to fight and abandoned the weapons given to him. He said, "I can not use this" and then say "I can not cut out anyone" (page 45). He depends on his friends to protect him.