Raising Parents with Emily Oster
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Poseidon is the god of the sea, Dionysus of wine and merrymaking, and Emily Oster? She’s the god of parenting. An economics professor at Brown University, Oster has built a massive and loyal audience by providing overwhelmed parents with the information and data they need to make solid and sound parenting decisions in a very confusing world. Her first book, Expecting Better: Why the Conventional Pregnancy Wisdom Is Wrong—and What You Really Need to Know, sold over a million copies and was translated into 19 languages, unseating the classic What to Expect When You’re Expecting as a fixture on many pregnant mothers’ bedtime tables. In this new series with The Free Press, Oster tackles the deep, difficult, existential, and often controversial questions facing parents today: Are we too soft on kids these days? How do I raise an independent child in an era of overprotection and helicopter parenting? Why are so many teen girls unhappy and anxious, and how can we make them happy again? Why are boys being left behind? Are kids overdiagnosed? What to do about the phones!? Is marriage important for raising kids? Should you even have kids at all? These questions are more urgent than ever. That’s because, by many measures, kids are worse off today than 30 years ago. They are more anxious than ever. They’re more depressed. They have more diagnoses than ever before. They’re more medicated. More kids are being raised without two parents in the home today. Kids’ reading and math scores haven’t recovered since their decline during the Covid pandemic. Childhood obesity has risen to 19.7 percent. Kids spend on average 7.5 hours in front of a screen for entertainment each day, and the average teen spends around 9 hours a day on their phone. What’s going on with kids today? How worried should we be about our kids? And what should we be doing, as parents, to change course, before it’s too late? How do we raise good people—which starts with raising good, informed parents—in this strange, new world? Over eight episodes, Oster speaks with over 50 of the world’s best parenting experts, journalists, doctors, psychologists, researchers, and more including: Dr. Becky, Jonathan Haidt, Pamela Druckerman, Richard Reeves, Hanna Rosin, Abigail Shrier, Bryan Caplan, Christine Emba, Johann Hari, Sami Timimi, Melissa Kearney, Ross Douthat, and many, many more. Oster brings her trusted voice—with its sobriety, wisdom, and humor—to the most challenging parenting questions of the day. The best way to support this podcast is to become a Free Press subscriber today at TheFP.com/subscribe
Season 1
Sensible and down to earth
Jan 30
I absolutely love Emily's balanced, common sense and data driven approach to this series. It was very refreshing to listen to a parenting podcast that doesn't try to sell you a magic wand nor makes you feel like you are failing in everything you do as a parent. I wish there was second season exploring more thought provoking questions like these!
Balanced, kind of. I question the depth of study?
5 days ago
I loved the first episode. I wrestled a bit with the second. The third I couldn’t finish. Specifically in the conversation about ADHD, for having allegedly talked to so many experts, somehow what got presented about ADHD was that there are a bunch of common symptoms from Tik Tok influencers leading people to believe they might relate. Sure social media has changed peoples understanding of ADHD. But never did she mention that an actual diagnosis for ADHD is a pretty strict process, and you have to meet a certain number of consistent symptoms, be evaluated in-depth by a neuro-psychiatrist, and have displayed symptoms since before the age of 5. No mention of different presentations of ADHD, which do change with time but don’t get “grown out of” generally. Casting ADHD as a boon for pharmacists or a social media ploy to pathologize symptoms that everyone deals with is harmful to the many people who are just trying to function more effectively. It’s also a separate conversation from whether medication is appropriate. As an adult with ADHD who does not want medication, diagnosis and deeper understanding of the condition has been what has empowered me to find coping strategies that work for me and be effective in my work and home life. I believe the same can be true for kids. (My understanding is that first line of treatment IS behavioral or environmental for kids.) And even though I don’t want medication, research shows that ADHD medications are the single most effective medication for any mental health / psychiatric condition in terms of medication success. I think this episode could have been a much more reflective or nuanced episode about coping, when medication is appropriate (or not), or even on other reasons (besides social media) that ADHD might be on the rise (a gene environment interaction perhaps?). But rhetoric like in this episode is NOT helpful. And as a life scientist, I found it irresponsible. Unfortunately between that and the discipline episode, I think I’m less interested in tuning in to future episodes. 😕 There is some interesting and worthwhile content for sure, but I’ve lost my enthusiasm for the depth of “data analysis”.
Sentimental Economist
5 days ago
I think the her podcast seems well meaning but is actually is the kind of slow rot which permeates gullible minds like hers and takes them in a trajectory where there is no return from. Slowly and steadily it takes people away from science and critical thinking It definitely feels like she is peddling religious values in guise of data which we all know can be twisted to speak any tongue
Excellent and balanced
Jan 15
In today’s biased world it’s hard to find a sober non partisan voice. Emily oster is that voice. If you’re ready to hear a variety of views on parenting this is the podcast for you.
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