Tips for parenting
6
Two good books for new fathers 6
The parenting golden rule 6
Health and emergencies 6
For babies and toddlers 11
Developing their executive function 12
A good book for picking a preschool 27
Building a strong family culture 28
Setting daily family routines 41
Teaching emotional skills 44
Your child’s learning styles, learning differences, and personality type 83
Teaching your child how to read 87
Teaching your child how to do math 101
Your child’s school life 107
The Internet and your child 115
Keeping birthdays under control 116
A great website for finding babysitters 117
Traveling with your child 117
A great summer program for teens 122
About physical intimacy 122
Parenting while also grandparenting 125
When children are affected by death 125
6
Table of Contents in depth
6
Two good books for new fathers 6
The parenting golden rule 6
Health and emergencies 6
Don’t circumcise your son 6
Relevant websites 6
Prevent medicine accidents 6
Germ prevention 7
Cleaning if a family member is sick 7
Prevention items to consider 8
Keep your child’s heart healthy 9
Teaching how to use the phone 10
Important numbers 10
Mystery number on caller id 10
Self-defense skills for your kids 10
For babies and toddlers 11
Babies teach the present moment 11
Good music for babies 11
Perhaps share your bed with them 11
Developing their executive function 12
What is it? 12
For 6- to 18-month-olds 13
For 18- to 36-month-olds 15
For 3- to 5-year-olds 17
For 5- to 7-year-olds 20
For 7- to 12-year-olds 22
For adolescents 24
Websites on strengthening EF 27
A good book for picking a preschool 27
Building a strong family culture 28
Being your family’s positive catalyst 28
Courage as a verb 28
Family prioritizing and planning 28
“The big rocks first” demonstration 29
The weekly family meeting 29
“The Indian Talking Stick” 29
Questions to ask 30
1-on-1 bonding time with children 30
Teaching family teamwork 31
Blindfold activity 32
Other teamwork activities 32
Not all situations are teamwork 33
Writing a family mission statement 33
Broaching the topic 33
Setting the mood 34
Setting ground rules for discussion 34
Brainstorming questions to ask 34
Writing the rough draft 35
Use the mission statement for focus 36
Family mail boxes 36
Family photo wall 36
Family journal and/or diary 36
Family wall calendar 36
Eating together 37
After-dinner walks around the block 38
A favorite teacher dinner 38
Sharing your religious/spiritual life 38
Teaching about the world’s religions 38
Sharing your family’s history 38
Writing and interviewing relatives 39
Family clean-up: “The 10-min. effort” 39
Family gardening 40
Family projects – “Work parties” 40
Traditions 40
Tips for passing along traditions 40
Interesting traditions 41
Setting daily family routines 41
Routines for throughout the day 41
Handling bedtime 42
When your child stalls 42
Snacks 43
Requests for one more book 43
Leaving without a tantrum 43
Keeping them in bed after you leave 43
Stay-away monster spray 44
Expectations for 13-year-olds + 44
Teaching emotional skills 44
Managing your own emotions first 44
Assessing your emotional skills 45
Be the emotion coach for your child 45
Assess your child’s emotional skills 46
Emotion coaching as your child grows 47
Three months or so 47
Six to eight months 47
Nine to twelve months 47
One to three years 47
Ages four to seven 48
Ages eight to twelve 49
Teenagers 49
Books for their emotional skills 50
Infants and toddlers 50
Early childhood 50
Middle childhood 50
Older children and teens 51
Developing their emotional awareness 51
Activities 51
Feelings Charades 51
Feelings Flashback 51
Art projects 51
Showing & pausing the tv or film 52
Meditating with your child 52
Handling your child’s mild depression 52
Improving your child’s self-esteem 53
Sparking creativity in your child 54
Activities 55
Developing their emotional self-control 56
The “Keep Calm” activity 57
Its four steps 57
Practicing it as a family 58
Teaching self-discipline 58
Teaching a rule 59
Elements of a good rule 59
Consequences 59
Help them assess others’ authority 59
Making choices and decisions 60
Press “Pause” and choose 60
Discuss choices made that day 60
What would …Barney… do? 60
Chores 61
Steps in assigning chores 61
Setting chores to music 62
Reminder sent by the chore 62
An example of chore delegation 62
Teaching goal-setting 64
Teaching money management 65
Being open with your spouse 65
Teach them how much things cost 65
When you shop with your child 66
Role-playing “Bank” 67
Role-playing “Budget” 67
An account with Bank of Ma/Pa 68
Allowances 68
Best book 69
Best board game 69
Best video game 69
Have them pay for a part of their expensive activities 69
For teenagers in particular 70
Misbehaviors for ages 2-12: Time Out 71
The Time Out procedure 71
Punishment vs. discipline 72
Maybe have “a breathing room” 72
Sample letter for the child to read 73
A worksheet they can fill out 73
Replies to their annoying comments 74
"Mine!" 74
"It's not fair." 74
"You're not the boss of me." 74
"I want it now!" 74
"You never let me do anything." 74
"I don't like you." 75
Ways to raise thankful children 75
Teaching perspective-taking 76
Six worthy activities 76
Empathy procedures to teach them 77
Apologizing at bedside… 78
… to a parent or sibling 78
… to a child 78
Marital conflicts in front of your kids 79
Refuge is needed for your child 79
Later, hug in front of your child 80
Helping your child make friends 80
The “befriending” learning curve 80
Body, eye contact, speech, tone 81
Getting them out of their shell 81
Conquering peer pressure 82
For service and social responsibility 82
Sample value questions to discuss 82
The “Phantom Family” activity 83
Your child’s learning styles, learning differences, and personality type 83
The multiple intelligences 83
Books and websites 83
Tips for the different intelligences 84
Verbal/linguistic 84
Logical/mathematical/scientific 84
Visual/spatial 85
Musical 85
Kinesthetic/bodily 85
Interpersonal 86
Intrapersonal 86
Personality type: Your child’s & your own 86
Books on your child’s personality type 86
Books on your type as a parent 86
ADD and other learning differences 87
HSP children (Highly Sensitive People) 87
Teaching your child how to read 87
Number-one reason why kids don’t read 87
Surrounding your child with words 87
Have good reading materials at home 88
Explicitly show how to recognize letters 88
Aligning reading with your child’s hobby 88
Reading with your child each day 88
Reading to your child 89
Too busy for read-aloud times? 89
Older child reads to the younger one 89
Having your child read to you 89
Before 89
During 89
After 90
At the library with your child 90
Series books for beginners 91
Is this book on my child’s level? 91
Summer reading ideas 91
Age-specific ways to boost your interest 91
Newborns 91
At six months 91
At nine months 91
Preschoolers 92
Elementary and middle schoolers 92
High schoolers 92
If your child loses interest in reading 92
For kindergarteners through third graders 93
Kindergarten 93
First grade 94
Second and third grades 95
More parent-child reading activities 96
Storytelling 96
Late-night reading 96
Cook recipes together 96
Daily treasure hunts 96
Read aloud and record a favorite book 97
Activities with the family or neighbors 97
Put on a book play 97
“Book-nics” 97
"DEAR"-“Drop Everything and Read” 97
Plan a "reading dinner" 97
Plan a neighborhood book swap 97
Start a parent-child book club 97
A child’s checklist for using all strategies 98
Great website for struggling readers 99
Improving your child’s vocabulary 99
Improving your child’s writing 100
Teaching your child how to do math 101
Good websites 101
Teaching certain math skills 101
Sorting – the first skill 101
Counting 102
Be on the lookout for numbers 103
Basic problem-solving 103
Money-math connection 104
The concept of time 104
Shapes and geometrical thinking 105
Ordering 105
Comparing 105
Measuring 106
Graphing 106
Fractions and percentages 106
Miscellaneous math things to teach 106
Your child’s school life 107
Funding your child’s education 107
Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) 107
Section 529 plans 107
Non-tax-sheltered ways to cover costs 108
Making the first schoolday a happy one 109
Books to help 109
Best after-school question to ask them 110
Homework 110
Breaking it into 15-minute chunks 111
Teaching it to you or to a sibling 111
Memorizing facts in fun ways 111
Report cards 111
Homeschooling and enrichment websites 113
Excellent lesson plans online for free 113
Picking a school when moving overseas 114
A "gap year" after high school 115
The Internet and your child 115
Sample rules for home 115
Websites about children's Internet safety 116
An excellent website for children’s use 116
Keeping birthdays under control 116
Great website for finding babysitters 117
Traveling with your child 117
Family-travel websites 117
Stay in one place, esp. when overseas 117
Babies and preschoolers in particular 118
Wait on the overseas travel 118
Stay in one place 118
Special things to bring 118
If flying 119
Hotel babysitters 119
A book for traveling with this group 119
Preparing the children before the trip 119
Books and movies 119
Language 119
Going through airports together 119
An allowance in return for a completed journal or scrapbook 120
Planning fun things with them each day 120
Homesickness 120
A 1-year travel sabbatical w/your family 121
A great summer program for teens 122
About physical intimacy 122
Showing affection in front of your kids 122
When a child walks in on the two of you 122
When they first ask about sex 123
3 things girls need from their dads 123
When they are teenagers 124
Parenting while also grandparenting 125
When children are affected by death 125
A dying child 125
A dying parent with a healthy child 128
Bereavement summer camps for kids 128
Related books 128
To help children process death 128
To help process a child’s death 128
6
6
Two good books for new fathers
Be Prepared: A Practical Handbook for New Dads and The Father’s Almanac
The parenting golden rule
Do unto your children as you would have other people do unto your children.
Health and emergencies
Don’t circumcise your son
There is no medical reason for circumcision other than to keep men extra clean and certainly no sexual reason. The foreskin is rich in pleasurable nerve endings, it keeps the head of the penis moist, and the extra skin provides added sliding pleasure during intercourse and masturbation. Some believe that it is a staple of religious traditions because the circumcised teenage male then gets less satisfaction from masturbation and is relatively more focused on his studies.
Do not retract the foreskin of your young son unless there is a specific medical reason. During infancy and childhood, the inner surface of the foreskin is physically attached to the skin on the head of the penis. This protects the penis’s opening from irritation, infection, and cuts. The cells that attach these two surfaces together will dissolve on their own. By retracting the foreskin prematurely, you will rip apart these delicate tissues that nature has "glued" together.
Relevant websites
· Circumcision Information and Resource Pages - http://www.cirp.org
· No Harm - http://www.noharmm.org
· Circumcision Resource Center - http://www.circumcision.org
· Doctors Opposing Circumcision (D.O.C.) - www.doctorsopposingcircumcision.org
· National Organization of Circumcision Information Resource Centers - (includes a list of foreskin-friendly physicians) http://www.nocirc.org
Prevent medicine accidents
1. Take care with “yummy” medicine. Never tell your child that liquid medicine is a special drink or juice, or that solid medicine is candy.
2. Store medicines in a single location. Select a single, secure area to keep all medicines (www.upandaway.org). Child-resistant does not mean child-proof. Lock away medicines. Be alert to the countless ways in which children can access medicines. Two in every ten medicine poisonings in children involve grandparent’s medicines, often found on a shelf or table top at the grandparent’s house, or in a suitcase, a weekly pill holder, or in grandmother’s purse.
3. Discard older (concentrated strength) infant’s acetaminophen drops. Acetaminophen is a common medicine for infants and children to treat pain and fever. There used to be two strengths of acetaminophen liquid—a higher strength (80 mg per 0.8 ml) of concentrated drops for infants and a lower strength of elixir for children (160 mg per 5ml). After years of serious mix-ups between these two strengths, companies are now making just the lower strength (160 mg per 5 ml) of acetaminophen.
4. Avoid the use of acetaminophen with infants and small children. Use ibuprofen instead as it overall seems to be safer. Don't give anti-fever medication as soon as a child is over 98.6F. Fevers are sign the child is fighting infection, giving anti-fever medicine may make the cause of the fever last longer.
5. Avoid giving cough and cold medicines to infants and young children.
6. Know how to measure liquid doses. Don’t repeat a dose unless directed. While giving a liquid medicine to a squirming child, the parent and child might both end up wearing part of the dose. Or, the child may vomit shortly after taking the medicine. Although you may doubt the child has swallowed and kept down enough of the medicine, giving another full dose could be dangerous. It is best to call your child’s doctor or your community pharmacist, who can let you know whether you should give your child another dose of that medicine.
7. Don’t give acetaminophen prior to vaccines. Vaccines can cause mild pain at the needle injection site and fever. In anticipation, parents may want to give their child a dose of acetaminophen before they get vaccinated. However, vaccines are less effective in children who have been given acetaminophen prior to vaccination. Use a cold compress on the needle injection site as needed to reduce pain.
8. Lastly, verify all vaccines. Vaccines are made in different strengths for children and adults. But all too often, children receive an adult strength vaccine and adults receive a children’s strength vaccine.