Education
80 Articles & Excerpts
The Fall Flurry
The Launching Years: Strategies for Parenting from Senior Year to College Life by Laura S. Kastner, Ph.D., Jennifer Wyatt, Ph.D. There's an uncanny resemblance between parents-to-be in a childbirthing class and parents at a college-information night, preparing for their high schooler's launch from home. Throughout the challenges of the adolescent years, differences among families
Going on Tilt
The Launching Years: Strategies for Parenting from Senior Year to College Life by Laura S. Kastner, Ph.D., Jennifer Wyatt, Ph.D. During a two-year period beginning with the senior year of high school, most parents find themselves confounded by unanticipated challenges. 'Why are my daughter and I fighting like cats and dogs now that she's about to leave?' a mother might ask.
The Completion of the Human Being
Montessori from the Start: The Child at Home, from Birth to Age Three by Paula Polk Lillard, Lynn Lillard Jessen Before we begin the chapters of practical detail that form the body of this book, it is important to visit two more areas of thought about the formation of human beings. If we are going to help the human infant in the monumental task of self-completion
If You Believe What Children Say
The Pressured Child: Helping Your Child Find Success in School and Life by Michael Thompson, Ph.D., Teresa Barker The question How was school today? may be the most-asked and least-answered question in America. It is the question that all parents are compelled to voice every day sometime between three p.m. and bedtime. Still, we cannot help ourselves.
Ghosts in the Classroom
The Essential Conversation: What Parents and Teachers Can Learn from Each Other by Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot Every time parents and teachers encounter one another in the classroom, their conversations are shaped by their own autobiographi- cal stories and by the broader cultural and historical narratives that inform their identities, their values
Safety for Adults in Schools
Creating Emotionally Safe Schools: A Guide for Educators and Parents by Jane Bluestein, Ph.D. If schools are going to be safe for kids, they're going to have to be safe for grownups as well. Teachers, counselors, administrators and other school staff whose energy is distracted by a need to self-protect for any reason just don't have as much
Defining Emotional Safety
Creating Emotionally Safe Schools: A Guide for Educators and Parents by Jane Bluestein, Ph.D. A 1992 district-wide survey of over sixty-five thousand students in Houston showed that 48 percent either disagreed or strongly disagreed with the following statement: The school is a safe place. Another 12 percent did not know.
Chapter 1 - What Safety Is
Creating Emotionally Safe Schools: A Guide for Educators and Parents by Jane Bluestein, Ph.D. It's 1999, right before Thanksgiving, and I'm sitting down to breakfast with the Sunday paper. I reach for the comics and the color supplements, which is where I normally start, but I can't get past the headlines: Deming Girl Dies.
Dimensions of a Very Big Picture
Creating Emotionally Safe Schools: A Guide for Educators and Parents by Jane Bluestein, Ph.D. Something is terribly wrong with our schools. How did a place that should be a sanctuary for kids becomes a source of fear and intimidation? What has happened? In Creating Emotionally Safe Schools, Jane Bluestein offers a plan to return schools to havens
Finding Happiness in Your Child
Ready to Learn : How to Help Your Preschooler Succeed by Stan Goldberg, Ph.D. What do you think about when someone says happiness? Usually, what comes tomind are things, or outcomes. Happiness can be a four-car garage in the suburbs, a high-paying job, an expensive new car, or a child who becomes a successful professional.
Solving the College Conundrum
Paying for Your Child's College Education by Marguerite Smith As a parent, you may be a little scared, and you're probably more than a little confused. Perhaps you have a newborn napping in her crib or a high school sophomore wrestling with math homework at the kitchen table or both.
Home: The Ideal School
Homeschooling for Success: How Parents Can Create a Superior Education for Their Chil by Rebecca Kochenderfer, Elizabeth Kanna Homeschooling is not new. It is the way this country has educated its children for all but the last 150 years. Now, at the beginning of the twenty-first century, as many as two million children in the United States are learning at home.
Leaving Books in School, Missing School, The Locker
Middle School Years: Achieving the Best Education for Your Child, Grades 5-8 by Michele A. Hernandez There are ways to reduce the risk of your children leaving books in school. One extreme measure is to buy an extra copy of the heaviest, bulkiest textbooks to keep at home; yet this is costly and many public schools don't even have enough to go around in
Homework Notebook
Middle School Years: Achieving the Best Education for Your Child, Grades 5-8 by Michele A. Hernandez There is one item so valuable that I will discuss it here in greater detail than I do in Appendix B, and that is the homework notebook. There is no general agreement as to whether the homework notebook should be a little tiny notepad
Organization 101: Teaching Your Child How to Get His Act Together
Middle School Years: Achieving the Best Education for Your Child, Grades 5-8 by Michele A. Hernandez Before setting out to design a book that would be helpful for both parents and students, I sent out a survey to roughly 650 parents at the private school where I work. I asked them a series of questions about education: what skills they felt their childre
Joy of Learning
As a former educator and school counselor, I witnessed first hand the challenges of youngsters with attention deficit. Learning the success strategies of Dr. Don Blackerby, author of Rediscover The Joy of Learning, has given me new insight in the learning
Every Child Deserves to Feel Successful!
Don believes that the symptoms of ADD seemed to be caused by a loss of control of the processing mind. Imagine you are watching a multiple slide show where three to five projectors are projecting images on a screen. Now imagine having to report on what
What Are You Teaching Your Children? by Jan Tincher What are you doing in front of your children? Kids mimic their parents, even if they don't understand what is going on. Do you get angry? What do you do when you are angry? Do you let that anger show, regardless of the consequences?
Crap Education by Peta Heskell The damage it causes us. Why do so many people suffer from lack of self confidence. What stops so many of us living our dreams. Why are so many people flocking to personal growth courses to find themselves? What went wrong and how can we right it?
The Greatest Gift We Can Give To Our Children by Leslie Karen Lobell, M.A. Some people believe the most important thing to give a child is an excellent education. More important than giving a child a proper formal education is to foster the child's self-esteem. This is a key ingredient for them to develop a sense of self-love
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