Showing posts with label How to Discipline a Child That Does Not Listen.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How to Discipline a Child That Does Not Listen.. Show all posts

Thursday, November 7, 2019

10 TIPS FOR PARENTING PRETEENS

It’s typically between the ages of nine and twelve that our cute, cuddly little children, once so willing to climb into our laps and share their secrets, suddenly want little or nothing to do with us. A child in preadolescence is not the same person he was just a year or two ago. He has changed—physically, cognitively, emotionally, and socially. He’s developing new independence and may even want to see how far he can push limits set by parents.
What he may not know is that he needs you as much as ever, because a strong parent-child relationship now can set the stage for a much less turbulent adolescence. But it won’t be easy, because you as a parent need to respect your child’s need for greater autonomy in order to forge a successful relationship with this “updated” version of your kid.

We asked some experts for parenting tips to help you keep the channels of communication open between you and your pre-teen—and have a smoother transition into the teen years.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

16 Research-Based Hacks for Your Social Life

Our world is made up of lots of people doing lots of things all the time. Psychology can help you to understand your own and other people’s behavior better. Following are just a few of the ways you can deploy psychology in your social life. Some people might call these items hacks, shortcuts, or even manipulation techniques. But all can be socially useful—and are based on sound psychological principles.

1. People remember the first and last things you do, so make a good impression and end on a high note.
The Serial Positioning Effect is one of the most well researched concepts in all of psychology. Basically, it explains that, in a list, we tend to remember the things at the start and at the end. This is a fairly strong and reliable effect. More generally, in a sequence of events, things that happen first and last are going to stick in our memory more strongly than events in the middle.

Monday, July 8, 2019

How To Change Your Child's Behaviour - Without Punishment

“Where did we ever get the crazy idea that in order to make children do better, first we have to make them feel worse? Think of the last time you felt humiliated or treated unfairly. Did you feel like cooperating or doing better?” - Jane Nelsen
Parents are often surprised to hear that most of what we think of as discipline -- spankings, consequences, even timeouts -- doesn't help kids become responsible, self-disciplined people. After all, parents punish so kids will learn to behave, right?

But children learn what they live. The most effective way to teach kids is our modeling, and to treat them the way we want them to treat others: with compassion and understanding. When we spank, punish, or yell, kids learn to act aggressively.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Child Psychology : How to Discipline a Child That Does Not Listen

Child psychology is a segment of psychology that focuses on the behavioral, mental, and social development of individuals from childhood into adolescence. It encompasses a wide range of topics including abnormal, developmental, and social psychology.

The specialist who focuses on child psychology is referred to as a child psychologist. They may be involved in the field as an academic or social program adviser, a counselor, or a researcher who studies the different aspects of child psychology so people understand children better. Myself Justin Urbas as a child psychologist I want to share this video with the people who are interested to gain knowledge on child psychology. This you tube video also helpful for the parent those who are suffering with the same problem. In this video you will see "How to Discipline a Child That Does Not Listen". 
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