PBH / Preferred Children's Services / Parenting Tips parenting tips. Parents who are patient, loving, kind, and fair areeveryday heroes. You teacher. teach your child right from wrong. http://www.preferredbehavioral.org/children/parenting.html
Extractions: Parents who are patient, loving, kind, and fair are everyday heroes. You are your child's first teacher, role model, inspiration, and moral guide-and it is hard work. But the rewards- healthy, caring, responsible, and productive children who love life-make it all worthwhile. Realize that becoming a parent is the most challenging mission in life. Be prepared to support your child physically, emotionally, spiritually, and financially for a lifetime.
Face2Face.org - Parenting Tips Communicating With Children About Sex General tips. It will teach them to cometo you when they have other questions. Anticipate your child's questions. http://www.face2face.org/pages.cfm?PageID=20
Extractions: Which brings me to you!...Parents, buy yourself a good size backpack with loads of pockets and put your purse in the backpack with things you will need fast like change, traveler checks and tickets in a zippered pocket on or in the backpack. Load it with books (for you> and handheld computer games (like poker, blackjack, car races, etc.) and even the minature travel games like Monopoly, are good, and the snacks. These can all be "stuffed" in the bag quickly if you are pressed for time and then "neatend" later.
Divorce Wizards: Parenting Tips Good parenting involves giving children love, security, stability and nurturingin the 3 STEPS TO A STRONG FAMILY Create rules that teach, rather than punish; http://www.divorcewizards.com/parentrap.html
Extractions: PARENT RAP Parenting is one of the most difficult and challenging jobs you will ever do mostly because of the 24/7 nature of the job. The trials and tribulations bring joy and heartache over the years, and just when you think you have it all figured out, your kids move on to the next stage. Even the "experts" don't have all the answers, and here to prove it - a favorite story: There was a widely respected man who taught parenting classes in his community. He was acknowledged as an expert on the joys and challenges of raising children, even though he himself had none. He called his class "Ten Commandments for Parents". Then he met a woman of his dreams, married and eventually had a child. He continued teaching the class now called "Five Suggestions for Parentsl" Soon after he had a second child and renamed the class "Three Tentative Hints for Parents." Finally he and his wife had twins and he stopped teaching the class entirely.
Divorce Wizards: Top 10 Tips On How To Be A Good Dad 6. teach that every behavior has consequences, both good and bad. LEN BRASS ISTHE AUTHOR OF CHILDREN FIRST A COMPLETE GUIDE FOR parenting THROUGH THE http://www.divorcewizards.com/top10gooddad.html
Extractions: Top 10 Ways To Be A Great Dad Teach, Train and Nourish With Love Nothing touches the heart more deeply than hearing, "I love you Daddy." I have heard that the gift of happiness belongs to those who unwrap it. Your children are that gift. Be an active, participating dad. The years fly by too quickly to do otherwise. Cease "put downs" directed toward the child/children and other people living in the home. Never compare one sibling to another Give as many hugs as possible, especially at the beginning and end of each day. When disciplining, be calm, clear, firm, fast and fair. Listen to the meaning behind the words your children say. What do they feel?
Parenting Tips | Teaching Honor To Kids Talk about them often as you teach and discipline your children. This idea was takenfrom the tape series, Eight Secrets to Highly Effective parenting, by Dr http://www.parentguide.com/tips/rules.html
Extractions: Rules are important in family life. They clarify expectations and provide opportunities for parents to teach about values. Some parents, however, rely too heavily on rules. They develop lists and family life boils down to a bunch of do's and don'ts. Remember that rules tend to focus on behavior and may miss the heart. But, if you use rules wisely and talk often about why the rules are helpful, you can teach your children a great deal about the values you want to pass on. As you begin making rules for young children, we would suggest three simple rules: Almost any infraction in family life can fall under one of these three. Having just a few rules is especially good for young children. These three become the basis for most other rules as children get older. Each of them represents an important character quality. These rules are simple and introduce young children to the fact that certain guidelines dictate what's expected in family life. Talk about them often as you teach and discipline your children. This will help to instill a sense of character even at a young age.
Parenting Tips | Dog Bites 2. teach your children to respect life. Don't let you're young child holdthe puppy. teach your older children to respect and love the puppy. http://www.parentguide.com/tips/dogbites.html
Extractions: Protecting Your Child From Dog Bites According to Pinellas County Animal Services, last year 1,520 dog bites were reported. Other interesting statistics cited are: Dog bite injuries are the number one childhood public health problem reported each year. Approximately 70% of all dog bites involve children. Almost 50% of all children are bitten by age 18. Dog bites represent 5% of all emergency room admissions. 585,000 dog bite wounds require medical care each year. Approximately 1 out of every 20 dogs bites someone each year 1. Properly socialize your puppy. A well-adjusted dog is not a biting dog. Before the age of 16 weeks, your puppy should encounter all of the things he'll see when he's an adult dog - young and old people, disabled people, cars, restaurants, loud noises, other animals, etc. 2. Teach your children to respect life.
Peaceful Parenting Tips child is different, this means that we need many parenting strategies in order tobe effective. Try some of these tips to help guide and teach your children http://www.c2r2.org/programs/crisis_nursery/peacfultips.htm
Extractions: Sometimes we are our own worst enemy! Before taking on a conflict with your kids, decide if it is really worth the time and energy you're putting into it. If they want to wear mismatched clothes to school, will it hurt them or someone else? Find a way to let the small things go, so that you don't run out of energy when the important issues come up. Use consequences. Natural consequences, taking away privileges, and firm family rules are excellent ways to manage behavior without yelling or hitting. Many of us need to learn these techniques from someone else, since they don't often come naturally. Take parenting classes, ask other parents who you respect, and read parenting books to get ideas that will work for your family.
Kids Home Alone - Parenting Tips - Parents - Girls And Boys Town tips for Parents to Help Youth. Kids Home Alone. . . . Once you have decided thatit is safe to leave your children home alone, teach them about safety issues http://www.girlsandboystown.org/parents/tips/kidsalone.asp
Extractions: Tips for Parents to Help Youth Many parents face the question of whether or not they should leave their children on their own during the day. If you are wondering whether or not your children are old enough to be left alone, first call your Child Protection Services to find out the minimum legal age at which they can be on their own. Then consider their ages and abilities. Determine that they are able to follow directions, and then set up a plan. Practice: "This is what will happen when you are on your own. . . ." Once you have decided that it is safe to leave your children home alone, teach them about safety issues: They should never open the door for anyone (nor peek through the blinds to look); Instruct them to stay in the house until you come home; Teach your children how to answer the phone and take messages without indicating they are alone; Use caller ID or an answering machine to screen calls;
Parenting Tips - Teaching Your Kids To Be Green Thumbs next year (lettuce). There are many things you can teach with a garden,and have fun while doing it. (03/13/2000). Return to tips. http://www.familygrowth.org/tips/teaching_your_kids_to_be_green_thumbs.htm
Extractions: Go to the backyard and let your child pick a small patch of ground to be his or her garden. Then, go to Wal-Mart, K-Mart, Rural King, or wherever and let your child pick out a few seed packets to plant. You may have to help them make appropriate choices for your garden size and climate, but mostly let them decide. When the soil temperature is just right go out and work the soil in a fun way and plant the seeds. Use a calendar to set aside time to water and weed the garden. Also, mark on the calendar when the time of harvest should be, which is usually found on the back of the seed packets. Use the garden to teach how different plants take longer to grow, how some only bear one fruit (radish), while others bear fruit all season long (tomatoes). Teach them how some plants have to die and dry out before you use them, such as beans that you want to dry on the vine before you pick, so you can make soup later in the year. At the end of the season you can teach how some plants go to seed for next year (lettuce). There are many things you can teach with a garden, and have fun while doing it.
Today's Family: Parenting Tips III parenting tips III by Dr. Sally Goldberg, Author and parenting Specialist. 1. Enjoyyour role as your child's first and most important teacher. teach all you http://www.todaysfamilymagazine.com/parentingtips03.htm
Today's Family: Parenting Tips I parenting tips I by Dr. Sally Goldberg, Author and parenting 5. parenting is aboutbuilding a positive relationship thank you. The way to teach your child to http://www.todaysfamilymagazine.com/parentingtips01.htm
Extractions: by Dr. Sally Goldberg, Author and Parenting Specialist Take care of yourself before you start your baby or childcare. You will do a much better job if you are not tired, hungry, or overworked. Always be on the lookout for conditions and circumstances that will cause your baby or child difficulty. Sometimes you will get all your clues from what is going on at the moment. Other times you can use past experience to help you. Whenever something goes wrong, learn from it so that you will be able to set it up better for the next time. Continually keep explaining to your child what you expect. You are your child's first and most important teacher. You may know exactly how you want your child to act in a particular circumstance, but he may not know as much as you think. Use praise and encouragement appropriately. Reserve praise for major accomplishments. Use encouraging remarks continually as you observe your child. Phrases like, "Pretty colors" and "sturdy tower" generate your child's self-praise like, "Good for me" and "I did that well." This process reduces the dependency on adult praise and helps to build child self-esteem.
Teach-At-Home... Your Homeschool Resource Center. Providing links to news, articles, study guides, and support groups.Category Reference Education K through 12 Home Schooling Parent, Julie Clark provides mustknow parenting information. Full of homeschoolingresources, tips and valuable information. teach-At-Home's Contest Winners Go http://www.teach-at-home.com/
Previous Tips Of The Week - Parenting.org For example, if you want to teach your child that physical violence is not the Formore parenting tips and information, visit Girls and Boys Town or Boys Town http://www.parenting.org/tips/previoustips.asp
Parenting Tips 4. teach Respect teach your children to respect the rights, bodies and Reward goodbehaviour and have FUN these POSITIVE parenting strategies are the most http://www.freenetpages.co.uk/hp/AndyGill/page11.html
Extractions: Take an honest look in the mirror and ask yourself: Are you in constant battle with your kids? Do you find yourself wanting to hit your children? Do you think your children are "winding you up" to spite you? If so, talk with someone before these feelings get the better of you. Call a friend or relative and/or seek professional help from Social Services, the NSPCC or your GP. Help is available so use it! Positively you are showing that you care about the relationship with your child.
Parenting Tips On Making God Real - ChristianAnswers.Net the day. And we also pray. Were trying to teach the kids that theLord is always with them, every moment of the day. He is not http://www.christiananswers.net/q-flc/flc-f002.html
Extractions: A parent asks: We have two little girls - Pamela turned six yesterday and Patty was four last October. Every evening my husband and I try to have a quiet time with the kids. We read from the Bible storybook; then we share what we did throughout the day. And we also pray. Were trying to teach the kids that the Lord is always with them, every moment of the day. He is not somebody who has to be "officially" approached - "Oh-my-lets go-before-God!" But Im still looking for more ways to make God real for my kids. Well, I think youre already doing a great job by reading to the girls from Christian books and praying with them. Little sentence prayers about simple things the children think about are best. As for other things you can do, you might occasionally read a story to your girls and then act out the story to apply the message to their lives. And if you read a story about being kind just before going to bed, try to do something nice for someone the very next morning as you remind them, "Remember our story last night before bed? Lets be kind to Mrs. Jones next door today, shall we?" Also, one of the best tools you can invest in is a little tape recorder children can have right by their beds so they can play Scripture tapes and Bible stories. And, oh, yes, if you have a VCR, dont forget the wonderful videos that are available now. Some have biblical settings and others are contemporary stories in which the main characters depend on God to get them out of all kinds of difficulties.
Parenting Tips parenting tips. Each Family is Special! The goals of positive parenting areto teach your child to become independent, strong, and in control. http://www.kictribe.com/SS/parenting_tips.htm
Rainbow Chimes: Parenting Tips And Advice parenting tips and Advice. DO Supervise kids when they are using sharp objects, includingsilverware; teach them to walk, never run, with scissors, and to keep http://www.rainbowchimes.org/tip_9.htm
Extractions: First Aid for the Eyes By Daphne Sashin Each year, 29,000 children under age 5 are treated in hospital emergency rooms for eye injuries. Kids are especially prone to these injuries because they have a slower reaction time than adults. The eye is a delicate organthe cornea can be easily scratched by an edge of paper or a fingernail, and a heavy blow to the eye could tear the retina. Even seemingly minor damage, if left untreated, can lead to irreversible vision problems later in life. So it's crucial to know how to handle an accident. Even more important: You can prevent nearly 90 percent of eye injuries by taking a few simple precautions. Read on for our sight-saving advice. First Aid for the Eyes Though some eye injuries can be treated at home, others need immediate medical attention. If you're unsure, call your pediatrician for medical advice; he may advise you to go to his office, see an ophthalmologist, or even visit the ER. Speck of dirt Have your child blink several times, which may help brush the dirt away. Pull the upper eyelid over the bottom lid, which will force the eye to tear, helping to wash out the dirt. If the speck is on the white part of the eye, you can try to lift it out with the corner of a moistened handkerchief or a cotton swab. Or if you have it on hand, use an eye lubricant such as Refresh Plus to flush it out. If you aren't able to remove the dirt, lightly tape a gauze pad or cloth over the eye to keep your child from rubbing it (this can grind the matter farther into the eye and scratch the cornea), and call your pediatrician.
Rainbow Chimes: Parenting Tips And Advice their time learning simply to play and share are being bombarded with flash cards,educational CDROMs and other gadgets designed to teach reading, writing and http://www.rainbowchimes.org/time_prt2.htm
Extractions: The Quest For A Superkid From Time magazine 4/30/01 Geniuses are made, not born or so parents are told. But can we really train baby brains, and should we try? BY JEFFREY KLUGER WITH ALICE PARK Tom Marton and Danit Ben-Ari of Brookline, Mass., have a cunning strategy for successful child rearing. Like most other parents, they wouldn't mind if their two daughters turned out to be among the next Mozarts or Martha Grahams or Mia Hamms. But essentially, they just want to help the girls get the most out of their lives. There was a time when kids being kids wasn't a radical notion. The key, they've decided, is the weekends, when they see to it that their daughters do ... pretty much nothing at all. Actually, "nothing at all" isn't quite accurate. If the girls, ages 4 and 7, want to sleep late, they do as do Mom and Dad. After that, there's time for a family breakfast and a lazy morning and an afternoon of outside play or a museum trip or hatever else strikes the family's fancy. Monday, they all know, will come soon enough, and the girls will be going back to the high-stakes race of schoolwork and homework and ballet or chess or soccer practice. But until then, they are going to have a chance to breathe.
Complete Parenting - TIPS And ARTICLE parenting. tips Articles. Building children's character. F is for Forgiveness Practice forgiveness regularly and teach the importance of it. http://www.eklavya.org/characterbuilding.htm
Extractions: HOME BACK PARENTING Building children's character CHARACTER is a belief in an absolute system of right and wrong, combined with the will to do what is right regardless of the cost. Therefore, a person with character will say, "What's the right thing to do?" and a person with NO character will say, "What's in it for me?". You automatically have respect for a person with 'character'. Character deals with the matters of the heartthe inner you, not the outer you. The foundation of a person is the character. When you are an adult, you should proudly be able to say I'm a person of character, I don't do what's wrong". In the past, society defined success in terms of characterwhat a person stood for, what a person believes, and the condition of the heart of the person. Unfortunately, in today's society, the shift is from character to achievement, to performance, to doing. It's no longer what the condition of your heart is, it's how well you perform. We are living in a culture today when we come to a fork in the road where we have to choose character over achievement, most choose achievement. When that happens, there is an automatic change in a person's ethics or values.