|
此文章由 YWS 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 YWS 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
本帖最后由 YWS 于 2013-9-5 10:54 编辑
Do Your Kids Need More Competitive Capital?
文章的标题 没有专门指出是对女孩的培养 文章内容里 讲女孩的偏多
完整的文章见链接 由于级别优先 无法直接贴链接 请在前面加 http://
blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/09/do_your_kids_need_more_competi.html
"When I was interviewing [job candidates] at Morgan Stanley, if I got a female candidate — because it's banking and you need to be aggressive, you need to be tough — if she played, like, ice hockey, done. My daughter's playing, and I'm just a big believer in kids learning to be confidently aggressive, and I think that plays out in life assertiveness."
I met Madeline while studying 95 families with elementary school-age children who compete in chess, dance, and soccer — research that is the basis for my new book, Playing to Win: Raising Children in a Competitive Culture. I label the lessons and skills that parents hope their children gain from participating in competitive activities "Competitive Kid Capital." The word "capital" applies, because many parents believe that the acquisition of certain character traits associated with vigorous competition will set their daughters up to be the leaders of tomorrow. In particular, as I talked with these parents about the skills and lessons they saw their children gaining from such activities, five themes emerged: (1) internalizing the importance of winning, (2) bouncing back from a loss to win in the future, (3) learning how to perform within time limits, (4) learning how to succeed in stressful situations, and (5) being able to perform under the gaze of others.
One of the questions that interested me was how parents of girls in particular make choices between the three activities, deciding which is best suited to building Competitive Kid Capital for a new generation of women leaders. Madeline also told me, "We have no illusions that our [nine-year-old] daughter is going to be a great athlete. But the team element [is important]... That ability to work on a team was a crucial part of our hiring process. So it's a skill that comes into play much later. It's not just about ball skills or hand-eye coordination."
有分的请加点分 升一个级别 好加链接 |
评分
-
查看全部评分
|