How to Parent Boys

Boys Will Be Boys

4695-585x700_istock_000010304538small.jpg

Ok, we were all girls once. So we kind of get it. (Though man, how it's changed.) But boys—sometimes they're a bit of a mystery. In her new book, Swagger, TV host and attorney Lisa Bloom deconstructs American boy culture to find forces at work against young men. Here she answers all of our boy-raising questions.

When does a strong boy stop and an aggressive boy begin?

4696-585x700_istock_000010314516small.jpg

"That is the critical question. I call the book Swagger because 'swagger,' especially when combined with 'like Mick Jagger' is the most popular song lyric—across all genres—in the last decade. Swagger is bravado, faking it, arrogance. In the book, I advocate a return to an important lost value: humility. Turns out, kids who are humble do better in school, have healthier emotional development, stay on task longer, overcome frustrations better and enjoy greater success as adults. That's a fat payoff for one attitude adjustment."

NEXT QUESTION: Lower achievement among boys

RELATED: How rough do kids say they have it?

Why is there such a bleak outlook for boys with low school achievement?

4697-585x700_istock_000018243865small.jpg

"The root of the problem is expectations that are both too high and too low for boys. Many young guys are kinetic: They need to squirm and move and climb and jump, and yet we expect boys as young as 3 to sit still, be quiet and listen. And as recess is cut around the country, we expect them to do this for hours at a time. When they wiggle, they get branded as 'bad,' and as time goes by, they grow to hate and dread school—a recipe for disaster."

More on low school achievement

4837-istock_000004413676small.jpg

"At the same time, many boys today consider reading to be 'girly' and mentally check out from books—and we allow it, because 'boys will be boys' or 'girls mature faster.' Where do they get this crazy idea? From us. At home, mom is twice as likely to read for pleasure as dad. At school, their (usually) female teachers read to them, and their (mostly) male coaches throw balls with them. That's why some of my core recommendations have to do with getting adult men to role-model reading for pleasure in front of boys. It's so critical to their success in school."

NEXT QUESTION: Violent imagery

What can a parent do about the rushing tide of violent imagery for boys?

4698-585x700_istock_000018243791small.jpg

"Parents must be aware of all data pinging its way into our sons' developing minds. Listen to their music. Google the lyrics. Watch the films. You have the right, and the responsibility, to have the usernames and passwords for every website they visit. If they balk, they've lost their Facebook privileges. Period."

NEXT QUESTION: Role models for boys

RELATED: Teach your kids Internet safety

How can we make violence repellant to boys?

4699-585x700_istock_000014444389small.jpg

"Speak up frequently and loudly for your values! Because the good news is that you are still your kids' No. 1 role model. For example, while consuming content from TV, websites or computer games together, help your son think critically about what he is watching, 'What are they trying to sell you?'"

NEXT QUESTION: Nature vs. nurture

RELATED: What are your kids watching on TV?

How does hard-wiring impact the way a boy behaves?

4700-585x700_istock_000007610030small.jpg

"Genetics is always a factor. But we incarcerate four times as many of our boys and young men today as when I was a kid. Are they four times more criminal? No, of course not. I believe we have simply decided as a culture to be far more punitive toward behavior like simple drug possession, with devastating consequences for our sons. In Texas, for example, kids who misbehave at school—the kind of stuff that used to send kids to the principal's office—are issued tickets of up to $500, and if they're not paid by age 18, they go to jail."

More on hard-wiring and boy's behaviour

4838-istock_000006373366small.jpg

"Many states have what's now called the 'school-to-prison pipeline,' sending kids into the criminal justice system for fighting at school, bad language or truancy. Criminal convictions can follow a man all his life, keeping him out of jobs, housing, licenses and benefits, which I write about in Swagger because even many judges and criminal defense attorneys are unaware of the 'civic death' that follows a conviction today."