Ages 5-7

Talking To Your Children about Boston

As we continue to hear news from Boston following the multiple explosions that have rocked that city, we should be mindful that our children are hearing this news as well. GCP covered the topic of how to talk with your children about tragedy after the Newtown massacre ("How Do We Talk to Our Children About Newtown?" December 17, 2012); [...]

By |2023-05-21T16:37:10-04:00April 15th, 2013|Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 16-18, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12, Parents, Saving Our Sons|Comments Off on Talking To Your Children about Boston

A.D.H.D. Diagnoses On The Rise: Overdue or Overuse?

Nearly one in five high school age boys in the United States and 11 percent of school-age children over all have received a diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (A.D.H.D.), according to new data from the Federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention compiled by the New York Times and reported in a recent article found here. The data [...]

By |2023-05-21T16:37:10-04:00April 4th, 2013|Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 16-18, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12, Parents, Resources|Comments Off on A.D.H.D. Diagnoses On The Rise: Overdue or Overuse?

Self Esteem: High Enough or Too High?

Two recent news items give us food for thought with respect to the development of a young person's self-esteem. Yesterday's New York Times features an article found here about Joel Baumann, a young African-American sophomore on the University of Minnesota's wrestling team who is also an aspiring singer and rapper. His latest video, "One's in the Sky", which urges [...]

By |2023-05-21T16:36:17-04:00March 1st, 2013|Ages 13-15, Ages 16-18, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12, Parents|Comments Off on Self Esteem: High Enough or Too High?

Good Teachers Really Do Make A Difference

Good teaching matters, and good teachers can make the difference in how well students learn regardless of how the students performed in previous years. Parents know this instinctively, as we angle to get our children in the good teachers' classrooms from pre-school days on. Our instinct has been recently confirmed by a study funded by the Bill and Melinda [...]

Family Dinners: Building Bonds Over the Dinner Table

With Thanksgiving less than a week away, thoughts turn towards the family meal. Holidays aside, how often do you and your children eat dinner together as a family? After-school, sports and work schedules can make gathering for family meals tough to organize on a regular basis. But researchers at the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at [...]

By |2019-11-26T13:36:51-05:00November 16th, 2012|Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 16-18, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12|2 Comments

Messy Kids, Crazed Parents

"Teenage Bedroom as Battleground", a recent NY Times article found here, offers parents advice on how to cope with their messy teens. Those of you who have figured out how to crack the whip at home so that your teens regularly pick up after themselves around the house and always keep their rooms neat without your intervention, skip to [...]

How All Children Succeed: Managing Stress and the Benefits of Failure

The last post introduced the education experts at yesterday's panel discussion, "How All Children Succeed", and noted their focus on the critical role parents play in their children's education. Today's focus is on two other important issues raised in that discussion: Managing Stress and the Benefits of Failure. Managing Stress Having been a practicing child psychiatrist for eighteen years, [...]

By |2012-10-25T22:37:43-04:00October 25th, 2012|Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12, Parents, Resources|Comments Off on How All Children Succeed: Managing Stress and the Benefits of Failure

How All Children Succeed

This morning I attended a fascinating panel discussion of educational issues hosted by Kimberly Morgan, President of the JPMorgan Chase Foundation. The discussion, "How All Children Succeed", was moderated by Michele Norris, host of National Public Radio's All Things Considered, and featured the following great group of panelists: Paul Tough, author of "How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity and the [...]

By |2023-05-21T16:22:16-04:00October 24th, 2012|Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12, Resources|1 Comment

President Obama’s Plan to Help African American Students Succeed

Last Thursday, President Obama signed an Executive Order creating The White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans, which is designed to support, coordinate and strengthen the work of communities and federal agencies to ensure that African-American youngsters are better prepared for high school, college and productive and successful careers. He announced this Initiative last Wednesday night in [...]

By |2023-05-21T16:22:17-04:00July 28th, 2012|Academics, Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 16-18, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12|Comments Off on President Obama’s Plan to Help African American Students Succeed

Better to be a Helicopter Parent or Let Your Kids Fail and Learn From Their Mistakes?

Today's New York Times "Room for Debate" discussion takes on the topic of "The Hovering Parent", and asks a number of columnists whether helicopter parenting has started to "crash and burn". Have parents gotten so involved with managing their children's lives that they are stunting their development into young adults who can think for themselves and learn from their [...]

By |2012-07-15T21:11:08-04:00July 15th, 2012|Ages 0-4, Ages 0-5, Ages 13-15, Ages 16-18, Ages 5-7, Ages 8-12, Parents|Comments Off on Better to be a Helicopter Parent or Let Your Kids Fail and Learn From Their Mistakes?
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