cover image In Defense of Childhood: Protecting Kids' Inner Wildness

In Defense of Childhood: Protecting Kids' Inner Wildness

Chris Mercogliano. Beacon Press (MA), $24.95 (205pp) ISBN 978-0-8070-3286-2

Mercogliano (Teaching the Restless) isn't the first to take the current over-controlling models of parenting and education to task, but the co-director of the Albany Free School (""a noncoercive, democratic inner-city school"") is one of the most passionate, and he demonstrates compellingly how institutions, over-structured schedules and ""hyperconcern"" are robbing children of their childhood, smothering their creative spark and ""inner wildness."" Exploring the life cycle from birth to adulthood, Mercogliano covers a lot of ground, taking into account history, biology, psychology, sociology, philosophy and literature, as well as plenty of anecdotes. But even in his more intellectual moments, examining the work of leading scholars and experts (including Albert Einstein and Henry David), his message is simple: in order to save our children we must allow them time for solitude and play, and restrain the urge to pathologize (and medicate) their ""disruptive"" behavior. He makes a convincing plea for a return to a broader, less judgmental definition of childhood ""normalcy,"" a term that used to evoke a ""Tom Sawyer/Huck Finn archetype-brash, willful, naughty, rambunctious, aggressive, and always dirty."" Showing parents and teachers how to curb the ""domesticating"" impulses that have turned growing up into ""a carefully scripted medical procedure,"" Mercogliano's book, full of insight, enthusiasm and hope, is as readable and practical as it is illuminating.