Judith Harris does not argue that "parents don't matter."  Why do people keep 
saying this?  All it takes is a read.  Her books are good reads, by the way.

Paul Okami
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Marie Helweg-Larsen 
  To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS) 
  Sent: Monday, December 04, 2006 9:01 AM
  Subject: [tips] Re: Stopping smoking


  Yes, Judith Harris argues that parents don't matter (as she always does) 
except by passing on their genes. However, tons of research show that the more 
adult smokers a child is exposed to the more likely it is that she smokes (not 
just genetically related adults). Kids themselves also say that they are 
influenced by what their parents say about smoking (the point: children 
interpret no anti-smoking messages or ambiguous anti-smoking messages as 
implicit consent/support for smoking).

  Crawford, M. A. (2001). Cigarette smoking and adolescents: Messages they see 
and hear. Public Health Reports, 116, 203-215. 

  I do find it humorous (in a weird way) that we assign the task of 
designing/implementing anti-smoking campaigns to the tobacco industry. And they 
don't do a good job -- I'm shocked!!!

  Marie


  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
The NY Times has an interesting editorial (Nov, 27/06, "When don't smoke 
means do")  on research on the effectiveness of  tobacco company 
advertising to get kids to stop smoking (big surprise: it's not).
It's at:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/27/opinion/27mon1.html

(you may need to register (free) to see it)

A bonus is that one of our favourite gadflies takes exception to an 
observation (and implied suggestion) of the editorial writer, namely that 
"Somehow the company [Philip Morris] forgot to tell the parents, as role 
models, to stop smoking themselves". 

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/opinion/l03smoke.html

Stephen

(Say, did anyone notice that we now have a university professor, Stephane 
Dion,  as the new leader of our traditional ruling party, the Liberals 
(he taught political science at the Universite de Montreal)? The front-
running candidate he defeated was also a university professor, at some 
other school called Harvard. Do you suppose this trend to politician 
profs could catch on elsewhere, say, for example, in the Excited States? 
Over lawyers, movie stars, and whatever it was that George Bush was?)



-----------------------------------------------------------------
Stephen L. Black, Ph.D.          
Department of Psychology     
Bishop's University                e-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
2600 College St.
Sherbrooke QC  J1M 0C8
Canada

Dept web page at http://www.ubishops.ca/ccc/div/soc/psy
TIPS discussion list for psychology teachers at
http://faculty.frostburg.edu/psyc/southerly/tips/index.htm
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

---
To make changes to your subscription go to:
http://acsun.frostburg.edu/cgi-bin/lyris.pl?enter=tips&text_mode=0&lang=english
  

-- 
*********************************************
Marie Helweg-Larsen, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Psychology
Dickinson College, P.O. Box 1773
Carlisle, PA 17013
Office: (717) 245-1562, Fax: (717) 245-1971
Webpage: www.dickinson.edu/~helwegm
*********************************************
---
  To make changes to your subscription go to:
  
http://acsun.frostburg.edu/cgi-bin/lyris.pl?enter=tips&text_mode=0&lang=english


---
To make changes to your subscription go to:
http://acsun.frostburg.edu/cgi-bin/lyris.pl?enter=tips&text_mode=0&lang=english

Reply via email to