Today's kids have costly career aspirations

28 Oct 2009

According to new research from The Children's Mutual, parents could be faced with bills of between £75,000 and £130,000 in 12 years time if their young children pursue their top career aspirations of teacher, doctor or vet.  


 

The Childrens Mutual Reports Dads Worth Additional £17,000 to Families

28 Oct 2009


According to recent research by the leading Child Trust Fund (CTF) provider, The Children's Mutual, today's dads undertake a wide variety of tasks in and around the home, such as cooking, assembling toys, acting as the children's taxi service, doing the school run, organising family finances and doing DIY.


 

Over Two Thirds of Parents Allow Children To Swear

28 Oct 2009


Research by the company behind engine starter “Start Ya Bastard” has found that over two-thirds of parents allow their children to swear without punishment, effectively accepting the practice. 4 in 5 parents swear in front of their children.


 

Big Words Spell Out Big Fears of UK’s 13-17 Year Olds

28 Oct 2009


16 September 2009

Findings from the Realtime Generation Survey 2009 are published today, revealing the education and career choices, expectations and concerns, of 13-17 year olds from across the UK.


 

Does Motherhood Cost Too Much?

17 Sep 2009


Women's rights group The Fawcett Society says that being a mum has a devastating impact on earnings. The title of the report, Not having it all: how motherhood reduces women’s pay and employment prospects pretty much gives the lie to what it says – that motherhood is a disproportionately expensive business in terms of reduced earning potential compared to fatherhood.


 

£32,000 a year is the Value of a Mum

16 Sep 2009


Legal and General's recent 'Value of a Mum' survey, which was conducted between 23 and 29 January 2009, showed that the average value of a Mum is over £32,000 a year, but only 53% of Mums questioned have life insurance, which is shocking.


 

Mums to Be, Babies and Toddlers Most at Risk from Swine Flu

03 Sep 2009

Under-fives and pregnant women are emerging as key swine flu risk groups, according to hospital figures and the age profiles of those who have already died.


 

UK kids demand more from Prime Minister to cut crime and keep them safe

20 May 2009


A new report publlshed today by Intuitive Media, provider of safe online learning communities for children, reveals clear demands on the Prime Minister to do more to listen to children; keep children safe; stop bullying; cut down gun and knife crime and ban drugs, alcohol and smoking.


 

Signs Give Babies a Helping Hand!

20 May 2009


American scientists prove that gestures help early speech.

New research from Meredith L. Rowe and Susan Goldin-Meadow, of the University of Chicago, published in ‘Science’ Journal, has established that babies who use gestures to communicate, at an early age, have large spoken vocabularies compared to their non-gesturing peers by the time they reach school age.


 

‘Career Currency’ of Vocational Qualifications Boosted

18 Mar 2009

Forget letters after their name, British parents are rooting for vocational qualifications to recession-proof their kids’ employment chances.


 

What to give Mum on Mothering Sunday this year? A break!

18 Mar 2009

With 1 in 10 women (=1.3 million female workers) working more than 45 hours a week, and almost 30% of adults in the UK having dependent children*,(*Mintel's Balancing Work and Leisure report Sept 2008), it's hardly any wonder the best thing you could give a mother on Mothering Sunday this year is a break.


 

Mums Neglect Themselves in Favour of Family

05 Mar 2009

Three quarters (76.6%) of mums feel that they neglect themselves in favour of putting their families first with 60% of mums spending less than 30 minutes on themselves per day and a quarter of mums having a mere 15 minutes or less to themselves daily. 


 

Students Go Online When Making College Decisions

05 Mar 2009

Academic strengths are still the most important factor for students to consider when making college decisions. However, a new survey has found that the YouTube generation need more information on colleges and want to get it through online video.


 

Phone Credit is the New Pocket Money

05 Mar 2009

Is this the death of pocket money? A leading Pay As You Go service has seen a huge rise in the number of parents assigning 'pocket-money' to their children in the form of phone credit, prompting research that has concluded that British parents are now more likely to pre-pay for their child's phone credit than give them an allowance.


 

UK Children’s Pocket Money Cut by £1 Million

17 Feb 2009

 

New research has revealed that the Tooth Fairy is likely to become known as a miser this year as the amounts she leaves under pillows are slashed.


 

Parents Blamed for Damaging Childhood

16 Feb 2009

The finger of blame has been firmly pointed at their parents in The Childhood Enquiry published on 5th February 2009. The report was commissioned by The Children's Society and launched in September 2006 as the UK's first independent national inquiry into childhood.


 

Family - Family News Archive

Today's kids have costly career aspirations

28 Oct 2009

According to new research from The Children's Mutual, parents could be faced with bills of between £75,000 and £130,000 in 12 years time if their young children pursue their top career aspirations of teacher, doctor or vet.  


 

The Childrens Mutual Reports Dads Worth Additional £17,000 to Families

28 Oct 2009


According to recent research by the leading Child Trust Fund (CTF) provider, The Children's Mutual, today's dads undertake a wide variety of tasks in and around the home, such as cooking, assembling toys, acting as the children's taxi service, doing the school run, organising family finances and doing DIY.


 

Over Two Thirds of Parents Allow Children To Swear

28 Oct 2009


Research by the company behind engine starter “Start Ya Bastard” has found that over two-thirds of parents allow their children to swear without punishment, effectively accepting the practice. 4 in 5 parents swear in front of their children.


 

Big Words Spell Out Big Fears of UK’s 13-17 Year Olds

28 Oct 2009


16 September 2009

Findings from the Realtime Generation Survey 2009 are published today, revealing the education and career choices, expectations and concerns, of 13-17 year olds from across the UK.


 

Does Motherhood Cost Too Much?

17 Sep 2009


Women's rights group The Fawcett Society says that being a mum has a devastating impact on earnings. The title of the report, Not having it all: how motherhood reduces women’s pay and employment prospects pretty much gives the lie to what it says – that motherhood is a disproportionately expensive business in terms of reduced earning potential compared to fatherhood.


 

£32,000 a year is the Value of a Mum

16 Sep 2009


Legal and General's recent 'Value of a Mum' survey, which was conducted between 23 and 29 January 2009, showed that the average value of a Mum is over £32,000 a year, but only 53% of Mums questioned have life insurance, which is shocking.


 

Mums to Be, Babies and Toddlers Most at Risk from Swine Flu

03 Sep 2009

Under-fives and pregnant women are emerging as key swine flu risk groups, according to hospital figures and the age profiles of those who have already died.


 

UK kids demand more from Prime Minister to cut crime and keep them safe

20 May 2009


A new report publlshed today by Intuitive Media, provider of safe online learning communities for children, reveals clear demands on the Prime Minister to do more to listen to children; keep children safe; stop bullying; cut down gun and knife crime and ban drugs, alcohol and smoking.


 

Signs Give Babies a Helping Hand!

20 May 2009


American scientists prove that gestures help early speech.

New research from Meredith L. Rowe and Susan Goldin-Meadow, of the University of Chicago, published in ‘Science’ Journal, has established that babies who use gestures to communicate, at an early age, have large spoken vocabularies compared to their non-gesturing peers by the time they reach school age.


 

‘Career Currency’ of Vocational Qualifications Boosted

18 Mar 2009

Forget letters after their name, British parents are rooting for vocational qualifications to recession-proof their kids’ employment chances.


 

What to give Mum on Mothering Sunday this year? A break!

18 Mar 2009

With 1 in 10 women (=1.3 million female workers) working more than 45 hours a week, and almost 30% of adults in the UK having dependent children*,(*Mintel's Balancing Work and Leisure report Sept 2008), it's hardly any wonder the best thing you could give a mother on Mothering Sunday this year is a break.


 

Mums Neglect Themselves in Favour of Family

05 Mar 2009

Three quarters (76.6%) of mums feel that they neglect themselves in favour of putting their families first with 60% of mums spending less than 30 minutes on themselves per day and a quarter of mums having a mere 15 minutes or less to themselves daily. 


 

Students Go Online When Making College Decisions

05 Mar 2009

Academic strengths are still the most important factor for students to consider when making college decisions. However, a new survey has found that the YouTube generation need more information on colleges and want to get it through online video.


 

Phone Credit is the New Pocket Money

05 Mar 2009

Is this the death of pocket money? A leading Pay As You Go service has seen a huge rise in the number of parents assigning 'pocket-money' to their children in the form of phone credit, prompting research that has concluded that British parents are now more likely to pre-pay for their child's phone credit than give them an allowance.


 

UK Children’s Pocket Money Cut by £1 Million

17 Feb 2009

 

New research has revealed that the Tooth Fairy is likely to become known as a miser this year as the amounts she leaves under pillows are slashed.


 

Parents Blamed for Damaging Childhood

16 Feb 2009

The finger of blame has been firmly pointed at their parents in The Childhood Enquiry published on 5th February 2009. The report was commissioned by The Children's Society and launched in September 2006 as the UK's first independent national inquiry into childhood.


 
 

Phone Credit is the New Pocket Money

05 Mar 2009

In a true sign of the technological times we live in, rather than giving their children pocket money in the traditional sense, parents have taken to buying mobile phone credit for them, endorsed by comprehensive research of British parents.

1,528 parents took part in the UK-wide survey by IKEA FAMILY partner www.FamilyMobile.co.uk, concluding that 61 per cent of parents with children old enough to own and use a mobile phone have taken to pre-paying for their child's phone credit rather than giving them a weekly amount of pocket money.

The research found that parents that pay for phone credit for their children spend an average of £10 per month up to the age of 12, after which age the monthly outlay for parents nearly doubles to an average of £17.50.

Parents' attitudes to the age at which they allow their child to own and use a mobile phone differ generationally.

Seventy three per cent of parents under 30 suggest that children between the ages of 9-12 are responsible enough to own a mobile phone while only 46 per cent of 31-40 year old parents agree.

Older parents aged 41-50 are the only age group polled who would still prefer to give their child an allowance rather than pre-pay for phone credit, 71 per cent of whom give their children pocket-money.

The top five reasons for parents giving children phone credit rather than pocket money are:


1. Security - so children have credit to call in an emergency
2. Stop children spending money on things they shouldn't be buying
3. Gives children responsibility for their phone usage - "once it's gone, it's gone"
4. Prevents money getting lost
5. Gives the child freedom to enjoy social life via phone

Teddy Pedersen, UK Managing Director of Family Mobile said:

"It is no surprise that security is the number one reason that parents
would want their children to have credit"

"With children owning mobile phones at a younger age than ever before,
we could be seeing the death of pocket money as parents decide to pay
for their phone credit instead."

 

What do you think? Do your tweenies have phones, and if so do you pre pay for their credit? Come and have your say!

 
 
 
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