Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Child's True Potential. Eileen Kennedy-Moore, Mark S. Lowenthal

Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Child's True Potential


Smart.Parenting.for.Smart.Kids.Nurturing.Your.Child.s.True.Potential.pdf
ISBN: 9780470640050 | 320 pages | 8 Mb


Download Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Child's True Potential



Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Child's True Potential Eileen Kennedy-Moore, Mark S. Lowenthal
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated



Adapted from Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Child's True Potential by New Jersey psychologists Eileen Kennedy-Moore, PhD & Mark Lowenthal, PsyD. Making sure my children reach their potential. Discover how children learn and grown at different ages using the seven intelligences. Parent does not update social network status that everything worked out great and that their child is now back to the perfect angel the Holiday cards will depict they are. Let your children's actions – their willingness to work, to practice, to try and fail, and try again – let THAT define them, rather than labels. In their new book, Smart Parenting for Smart Kids, psychologists Eileen Kennedy-Moore and Mark S. Overindulging or providing too much of a good thing (whether it is over-buying or over-nurturing or over-helping) takes away from a young person's ability to learn self-reliance and decision making skills. What's the most important trait you'd like to develop in your child? If you're like most parents, intelligence is probably at the top of your list. The Five Love Languages: How to Express Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate by Garynd (a must read). Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Childs True Potential. Lowenthal discuss how parents can help children develop social and emotional intelligence. While, it's true, that some skills come easier to some, there's incredible potential in all of us, if we are willing to educate ourselves with the vast sea of free information that is available to us at the click of a button, and then put what we learn I hope to teach them this by praising their efforts rather than label them as smart or special. According to the authors of How Much is Enough?, overindulgence is doing or having so much of something that it does active harm or at least stagnates and deprives that person from achieving their full potential. Parents must take an active and positive role in helping kids to proactively manage their online reputation. This article appeared in the June 2012 issue of MetroKids. I am going to share with you my opinion of why I think you should think twice before using social networks such as Facebook or Twitter to blast frustrations about your child. Smart Parenting for Smart Kids: Nurturing Your Child's True Potential by Eileen Kennedy Moore.

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