Home | Letters | FAMILY VALUES INFLUENCE BEHAVIOUR, ATTITUDES

FAMILY VALUES INFLUENCE BEHAVIOUR, ATTITUDES

Font size: Decrease font Enlarge font

Sir,

 

In most developing and developed countries, family values are often defined by the use of political, traditional, modern and post-modern approaches.

The structure of family relationships unfailingly influences individual economic behaviour and attitudes. History has taught us that strong family ties imply more reliance on the family as an economic unit, which provides goods and services and less on the market and on government for social insurance. 

As an independent thinker, it is now clear to me that ‘family values’ are something of a catch all, cure all phrase in contemporary social life , on a whole range of levels and the precise definition of all those values varies according to respective political, economic, social and moral sentiments of the user. 

Belief

It is common belief that in both developing and western societies, families with strong ties provide many home-produced goods and services like child care, home cooking, caring for the elderly and the education of children, among others. This of course requires time away from market activities and lower participation in the labour force especially for women, and youth who stay at home longer.

In our communities we advocate for strong family values that are seen to preserve family relations. Universally, families are the first level of social influence for our children. 

Tool

A positive parental style enhances a child’s positive behaviour and is viewed as a good socialisation tool. A child is trained to conform, obey and comply with societal values like respect and participation. 

The indication is that, if a child leaves his nuclear or extended family and goes and faces the world, he/she should be operational with positive family values that always put the family first. 

The idea is to arm a child to be resilient when faced with adversity and to be acknowledged by society. Moreover, delighted parents imagine that a child with strong family values will function to be a positive role model in the near future. It goes without saying that families seen to be lacking positive values are often shunned, stigmatised, labelled and discriminated upon. Institutions like education and religion tend to associate children who come from such ‘weak’ valued families as victims of crime, ill health, drug abuse, school dropouts and all sorts of social ills.

Changing

The reasoning is that due to modernisation, family values are undeniably changing and steadily too. For an example, the marriage institution today does not necessarily uphold reliable strong family relationships. In short, this institution does not always serve the purpose or need of a family anymore, like it used to be in the past. Additionally, this system has become egalitarian by ‘providing ’family members many more options in terms of relationships.

Feelings of being isolated and loss of self-esteem are very common. Depression and suicide has become very common in schools. On the other hand, if family values are weak, a teacher cannot simply take the role of a parent that conveniently.

 

Prudence

Comments (0 posted):

Post your comment comment

Please enter the code you see in the image: