Home
Parents Blog
Child Discipline Aggressive Kid
Breath Holding
Kids Interrupt
Car Travel
Head Banging
Kid Biting
Hyperactive Kid
Kids Lying
Bad Attitudes
Bedtime Dramas
Wandering Away
Going Shopping
Bed Wetting
Being Stubborn
Kids Visiting
Discipline Rules
Away from Home
Calling A Time Out!
Kids Arguing
Kids Tantrums
Child Bullying
Destructive Kids
Stay in Bed
Demanding Kids
Back Chat
Discipline Works
Nasty Habits
Potty Training
Feeding Fights
Kids Stealing
Kids Fighting
Who To Blame?
Stop It Now!
Kids Swearing
Nothing Works!
Not Sharing
Play with Food
Demanding Kids
Stranger Danger
Free Resources Toddler Resources
Free Kids Books
Free Newsletter
About Us
Add Your Article
Kids Arts & Crafts
Child Development
Parent Magazine
Childhood Quotes
Kids Talking Back
Free Classic Stories
Understanding Rules
Make Child Obey
Family Vacations

[?] Subscribe To This Site

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

“Help Your Child With School”
Free toddlers activity & kids learning guide parenting article

FreeToddlersActivity&DisciplineGuide This free toddlers activity and kids learning guide site has articles about math for kids, science experiment for kid, with positive parenting tips, free early childhood literacy, learning history & geography, child education articles about parent teacher communication, parent tips for kids starting school, including free child development school and learning problems parenting resources.

by Patty Wipfler

Children love to learn. Learning is as natural as breathing to them--they absorb every single thing that happens! They learn through play, they learn from the behavior of the children and adults around them, they learn from their own experiments. By all rights, going to school, where there will be new experiences, many children, and a chance to master powerful skills like reading and math, should be exciting and fun for them!



Toddlers activity, Help Your Child With School In order to learn well, our children need to feel safe and wanted

Their minds don't function well unless this bottom line condition of being welcome and appreciated is met. At school, they need to know that their teachers like them and think they're special. They need to know that they won't be bullied or made fun of on the playground or in the hallways.

They need encouragement, high expectations, and a good deal of fun. Play, which is the language and work of young children, is still deeply important to children of school age.

The more they are allowed to play in their learning activities, the faster they absorb information and new skills. At home, children need kindness, affection, and some measure of one-on-one time with their parents, even if it's has to be as little as a five-minute snuggle before going to sleep every night or the ride in the car to the Boy Scout meeting once a week.

There are several basic ideas about helping children learn that aren't well understood in our culture. In fact, they're not well understood in most cultures of the world. For schools to foster learning, and for parents to support their children, we grown-ups need to see that these learning needs of children are met both at home and in the schools. Here are a few of the key concepts that aren't yet well-understood:

 Children need to feel loved, or at least understood and respected, in order for their minds to be clear enough to learn.

 Children need large amounts of physical affection and closeness. Closeness fuels their confidence and frees their minds of worries about whether or not they're OK. If they're unsure about whether they're OK, they can't concentrate on learning.

 Children learn best through play and hands-on activities. The best teacher is experience, experience, experience! We need classrooms in which children are doing things together, experimenting, and teaching each other what they've learned. In particular, free play without competition or pre-set rules is a great builder of children's intellect, imagination, and confidence.

 Jumping on the beds at home, chasing around the house, and wrestling and pillow fights (the children win, of course!) are the kinds of personal, physical play that lift children's spirits and create enough fun that they can manage to stay hopeful even when days at school aren't inspiring. If life feels like drudgery, learning won't take place. So free play is vital. It keeps your child's spark of hope and interest alive!

 Children need the freedom to make mistakes and ask questions without fear of shame or belittlement. Mistakes and "failures" teach as effectively as successes, as long as a child continues to be respected.

 Children's keen sense of justice demands that they and others be treated thoughtfully and fairly. Fairness, to children, means limits but not anger, boundaries but not belittlement, facing problems but not attacking people for having problems.

 When a child isn't able to concentrate or to learn, there's usually an emotional issue that blocks his progress. It feels bad on the inside when you can't think! It feels scary on the inside when you can't do what's expected of you, and you don't know why or what to do about it! This is the position children are in when they can't write a story, can't memorize their times tables, or can't sit down to their homework. They feel upset, and often scared. They also feel alone.

 When we parents see our child caught in upset around learning, it's usually infuriating. Our child's problems make us feel tired and worn. Our thoughts are something like, "By now, he should be able to do school work on his own! Why do I have to get into it?!" We badly want our child's problems to go away so we can get a little peace!

 What helps immensely is something we've always been taught to avoid at all costs. If you can sit close by while your child has a good cry about school, or a tantrum about not wanting to do homework, your child will do the work of draining some of the bad feelings that have paralyzed him.

 Emotional release helps children focus their attention and regain their ability to be hopeful about learning. Your child won't sound reasonable while he cries or rages. He'll believe very strongly in the terrible feelings he's having. But surprisingly, the crying and the chance to make sure you know how bad it feels inside has a deeply healing effect.

 So try to keep from arguing and reasoning with him, and stay close while he "cleans the skeletons out of the closet" with his tears and his bleak or angry thoughts. He'll finish. The longer he has been able to cry, the more improvement you will see in his ability to concentrate and to believe in himself.

 Schools are not set up to help children with the tensions that keep them from learning and getting along. This is a job we parents need to do. It's a very hard job, one that was never done for us.

 It feels all wrong to allow a child to cry on and on without fixing anything, without sending him to his room or insisting that he pull himself together. But listen. Listening heals. Listen your way through a big cry or tantrum once, without trying to "fix" his feelings or solve the problem, and you'll see how well it works to clear your child's mind and restore his sense of closeness to you.

 The huge need children have for one-on-one attention while they learn is natural. It's the school environment, where so many children need to compete for the attention of just one adult, that's not natural.

 Children's needs feel bothersome to parents and to teachers, not because the children are out of line, but because our society is out of line. Policymakers and citizens haven't yet decided to give young children enough adult attention in school, and parents enough support at home, to meet natural human needs for support and attention.

 When schools are genuinely supportive to children, we'll look back at present class sizes, at the lack of support for teachers, and at the lack of services for children experiencing difficulties in learning, and think of conditions in the year 2000 as primitive indeed!

Assisting Our Children, Supporting Their Schools

Amost every child will experience some difficult times in school. And almost every parent feels upset, helpless, and/or angry when these troubles surface. Our strong love for our children and our frustration with a society that doesn't offer much support to its young people makes it hard to think clearly when our children are having a hard time.

There are a few guiding principles that many people find helpful when they hit a hard patch

 It doesn't help to blame your child, yourself, or the teacher for the difficulty. Blame wastes energy and makes others feel worse than they already do. Because blame spreads bad feelings, it gets in the way of the fresh thinking and cooperation you'll need in order to build solutions.

 You aren't to blame. You're working as hard as you know how that this difficult job of parenting. Your child isn't to blame. He's doing the best he can, and is carrying burdens he hasn't told you about yet, or doesn't know how to shed yet. The teacher is not to blame. No matter who has made mistakes, the heart of the matter is the lack of support and assistance for everyone involved.

 We live in a society that doesn't value its children or the people who work with them. There is talk of the importance of education, and many skilled and good-hearted people working in that field, but too little funding and respect are funneled toward schools.

 In most schools, human caring and teaching expertise is spread far too thin. You, your child, and your child's teacher are all stressed because learning conditions aren't optimal. Constructive action means to look for people's strengths, call on their good intentions, and perhaps to look for additional help.

 First, listen to your child about the difficulty. He's feeling hurt and upset, and he can't solve the problem in that state. See if you can be warm and positive enough to help him have a big cry or a tantrum. Children can often work through their feelings of victimization and come up with their own solutions to troubles at school, if they have the chance to offload the feelings in big, hard cries at home.

 Let your child be in charge of the solutions. After your child has shed big feelings of upset, and after you've spent some time just being close to him without trying to solve the problem, ask him what he wants to do.

 Listen carefully. There may be a role you can play in advocating for him with the teacher or helping him talk with his friends. But don't assume that because he brought his feelings to you, that he wants you to take charge of the situation. Many times, children can think of how they want to take charge after one or several good cries.

 If he wants you to approach a teacher or other students, listen well before you attempt to find solutions. A teacher, principal, or student needs to have their side of the story heard before they will be able to change a viewpoint or cooperate toward a fresh solution. If things aren't working well, they feel badly about it (even if they're acting like they don't).

 Fresh, workable behavior comes only from a mind that's been freed a bit from its troubles by a good listener, a listener who cares about all the parties involved. Your thoughts are important, and working toward a solution is important. But listening well to the others involved is as vital as tilling hard-packed soil before you attempt to plant a new seed.

 Problem-solving goes better if we find a listener, too! When our children struggle, we feel as frustrated and disappointed as they do! When they meet with unfairness, we want to storm and rage until the threat to them is gone.

 When they seem to be unable to help themselves at home, we aim our frustrations at them, driving them further into their shells of hopelessness. In short, when our children meet trouble, we feel troubled too.

 To be good allies and problem-solvers, we need someone to listen to us, perhaps again and again, to how we feel and to the things we've tried. Someone listening to how angry or disappointed or exhausted we feel freshens our communication with our children, their friends, and their teachers. Our problem-solving effectiveness is 100% improved if we decide to find a listener and let them hear our fears and our frustrations before we try to help!

How Listening Works

Here is one parent's experience: "My daughter was given a month to learn all the states and their capitals. I offered to help her learn groups of about six states at a time. After she memorized the first six she felt she couldn't possibly learn all the states, and she had a huge cry.

Then she proceeded to learn the second set of six states and capitals, but again she felt that this was too much for her. She had another long cry. She kept saying, 'I'll never learn this. I just can't do it!' She also got mad at me for trying to help, and cried about my 'interference.' I was somewhat confused by this, and wondered if indeed I had gotten too involved in this assignment. In a few days, she again felt hopeless about learning them all, and had a third big cry. Each cry she had went on for half an hour or more.

She felt she could never do the assignment, and expressed frustration and anger at me, at the assignment, and at the world. I kept listening and wondering how this was all going to turn out. "

"After the third cry, everything changed. She learned the next sets of states quickly and easily. She took on a set of 18 states and capitals, and did them all at once. Three days before the test, she asked me to quiz her on them, and she knew them all! She was ecstatic, and I think she was amazed that she had done something she was sure she never could do. She was so proud of herself.

The day before the test, she was completely confident that she would get 100%, and she was actually looking forward to the test! She usually showed a lot of anxiety around tests, so I'd never seen her like this before. After the test was over, she said she was sad that it was over, and she told me that she wished she could do it again! She has referred to it again and again as one of the major learning feats of her life, and she has thanked me profusely for my help with the project, saying that she never could have done it without me. It was great to see this whole process work!"

The articles below give a perspective on parenting based on the PLI approach, Parenting by Connection. A deeper discussion of this approach is found in PLI's booklets, Listening to Children, Setting Limits with Children, and Supporting Adolescents. You may reproduce articles without permission. Please cite our web site as the source.

http://www.parentleaders.org parents leadership institute




FreeToddlersActivity&DisciplineGuide This free toddlers activity and Parent Child Development guide site has articles about positive home school parenting skills, social skills training for child, positive parenting tips for school books and lesson plans, study guides, test guides, how to read, maths for kids, learn history, encyclopedias reference books for teachers how to learn addition, learn subtraction, learn to spell, learn to read, school bullies & home schooling tips for Parent Child learning skills resources.

What toddlers activity or child discipline
parent resources are you looking for?
Try a local search of our site for your answers

Google
 
Web www.free-toddlers-activity-and-discipline-guide.com




ClickToMakeYourOwnWebsite!
Click here to make your own web site … simple & fast

Subscribe to “Positive Parenting Tips” free monthly
parent magazine


E-mail Address

Enter your First Name
Then

Don't worry -- your e-mail address is totally secure.
I promise to use it only to send you “Positive Parenting Tips”.
Check out our PAST ISSUES

Back to Top of page
free toddlers activity & discipline guide

HOME PAGE

Contact Us || Your own Website || Subscribe Newsletter || Parenting & Childhood Quotes || Link Directory || Parent Child Blog || Privacy Policy || Site Map || Terms of Use

================================================================
DISCLAIMER: The free toddlers activity and child discipline guide site resources on this site are not intended to be a substitute for professional advice. While all attempts have been made to verify information provided in this publication, neither the author nor the publisher assumes any responsibility for errors, omissions or contrary interpretation of the subject matter herein. There is no guarantee of validity of accuracy. Any perceived slight of specific people or organizations is unintentional. This free toddlers activity and discipline guide site resources website and its creators are not responsible for the content of any sites linked to.

The free toddlers activity and child discipline guide site resources contents are solely the opinion of the authors and should not be considered as a form of advice, direction and/or recommendation of any kind. If expert advice or counseling is needed, services of a competent professional should be sought. The author and the Publisher assume no responsibility or liability and specifically disclaim any warranty, express or implied for any products or services mentioned, or any techniques or practices described. The purchaser or reader of this publication assumes responsibility for the use of these materials and information. Neither the author nor the Publisher assumes any responsibility or liability whatsoever on the behalf of any purchaser or reader of these materials.

This free toddlers activity and child discipline guide site content description: This free toddlers activity and kids learning guide site has articles about math for kids, science experiment for kid, with positive parenting tips, free early childhood literacy, learning history & geography, child education articles about parent teacher communication, parent tips for kids starting school, including free child development school and learning problems parenting resources

This free toddlers activity and child discipline guide site article links include Parent Magazine, Child Development, toddler discipline, discipline for kids, articles on how to use positive parenting resources to discipline child and use your good parenting skills, providing you with inspiring parenting & childhood famous quotes, parenting toddler time out techniques, early childhood child behavior problem parenting tips with free behavior chart. This free toddlers activity and kids learning guide site has articles about math for kids, science experiment for kid, with positive parenting tips, free early childhood literacy, learning history & geography, child education articles about parent teacher communication, parent tips for kids starting school, including free child development school and learning problems parenting resources
================================================================




Additional Free Toddlers Activity & Child discipline Links


Toddlers Activity A a - games
Toddlers Activity B b - games
Toddlers Activity C c - games
Toddlers Activity D d - games
Toddlers Activity E e - games
Toddlers Activity F f - games
Toddlers Activity G g - games
Toddlers Activity H h - games
Toddlers Activity I i - games
Toddlers Activity J j - games
Toddlers Activity K k - games
Toddlers Activity L l - games
Toddlers Activity M m - games
Toddlers Activity N n - games
Toddlers Activity O o - games
Toddlers Activity P p - games
Toddlers Activity Q q - games
Toddlers Activity R r - games
Toddlers Activity S s - games
Toddlers Activity T t - games
Toddlers Activity U u - games
Toddlers Activity V v - games
Toddlers Activity W w - games
Toddlers Activity X x - games
Toddlers Activity Y y - games
Toddlers Activity Z z - games
Toddlers Game
Kid Activity
Child Activity
Parent Magazine
Child Development
Parent Resource
Mother Parenting Perfect
Free Kids Game
Parenting Article
Parenting Resource
Toddler Sleep all Night
Parenting Websites
Baby Temper Tantrum
Child Behavior Chart

Toddler Songs
Toddler web site
Poem for Parents
Halloween Costume
Toddler Art & Crafts
Toddler Game
Feeding Toddler
Toddler Crafts
Toddlers Party Game
Toddlers Growth Chart
Toddlers Toys
Child & Divorce
Math for Kids
Kid Arts & Crafts
Toddler Birthday Party
Toddler Books
Toddler Foods
Toddler Crying
Toddler Gifts
Toddler Separation Anxiety
Kids Science Experiment
Kids Jokes
Child Crafts
Fun Games for Kids
Kids Party Games
Early Childhood Article
Childhood Quotes
Parenting Quotes
Child Potty Training
Parenting Toddler
Baby Tantrum
Toddler Behavior
Discipline for Kid
Free Behavior Chart
Temper Tantrum
Problem Children
Behavior Problems
Relationship Problem
Parents Tip
Angry Kid
Aggressive Behavior
Holding Breath
Interrupting
Car & Traveling
Head Banging
Child Toddler Biting
Hyperactive Child
Child Lying
Putting up Guard
Bedtime Drama
Wandering Away
Shopping
Bed Wetting
Being Stubborn
Misbehaving & Visiting
Consistent Discipline
Discipline away from Home
Time Out
Debating & Arguing
Tantrums
Bullies & Victims
Destroying Property
Kid Sleep
Demanding Freedom
Talking Back
Discipline that Works
Nasty Habits in Nice Children
Potty and Toilet Training
Fussy Eaters
Stealing
Fighting
Difficult Child
Child Obedience
Swearing
When Nothing Works
Not Sharing
Taking
Playing with Food
Demanding Child
Strangers

Sleep Aid Tips

Follow Good Parenting 4U on Twitter



Welcome!
....I'm Kevin - this good parenting toddlers discipline & free acivities guide is packed full of articles on positive parenting, free kids games, home schooling, great recipes, arts & crafts & child care tips. We really do hope you enjoy your visit, and please remember to bookmark our site for later reference!.

Got any questions or comments?, please do Contact Us



Printable games. Instant fun! Just add paper




Bing