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The Connection Project

Raising Independent Kids

You drive the forgotten homework to school. You manage the college applications. You hover, because letting your child struggle feels like neglect.

Nicole Runyon, LMSW, spent 22 years as a psychotherapist working with children and adolescents, and she saw where that hovering leads. Raising independent, resilient children requires the opposite move: parents who step back and let kids carry what they can carry.

This pillar of The Connection Project collects Nicole's articles on independence, from the 9-year change through Gen Z, college prep, and the milestones teenagers are skipping.

What Independence Means in Child Development

Independence in child development is a child's growing capacity to handle age-appropriate tasks, decisions, and discomfort without adult intervention. It builds in stages, from dressing themselves at four to driving at sixteen, and each stage depends on parents allowing struggle, failure, and natural consequences rather than removing them.

Failure is a gift. A child who fails a test and survives it learns more about resilience than a child whose parent emailed the teacher first.

Nicole's rule: protect childhood, but not at the cost of independence. The articles below show you what that looks like at each stage.

Articles

Articles on Independence and Child Development

The 9-Year Change

Around age nine, children pull away from parents for the first time and begin forming a separate self. It is a developmental stage, not a behavior problem.

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Generation Z's Distinct Challenges

Gen Z grew up with smartphones in hand and adults clearing every obstacle. The result is a generation long on comfort and short on practice at being capable.

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College Prep and Parental Over-Functioning

When parents manage the essays, the deadlines, and the resume-building, the application gets stronger while the applicant gets weaker.

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College Application Inflation

Applications keep inflating, and adolescents keep absorbing the message that who they are is not enough.

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The Driver's License Decline

A driver's license used to be the teenage badge of independence. Today's teenagers are waiting years past eligibility, and the reasons say a lot about how childhood has changed.

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Keynote Speaking

Go Deeper: The Book on Fostering Independence

These articles diagnose the pattern. Nicole Runyon's bestselling book gives you the full stage-by-stage path out of it, with practical ways to step back, hold boundaries, and let natural consequences teach.

Get Free to Fly: the secret to fostering independence.