By: Joe Newman * Note from the Editor — With so many resources and
books about parenting, discipline, and behavior, it's a challenge deciding on which area to focus.
I love reading
books about parenting lots of kids, can u share with me the book name and author?
You can find
books about parenting in general can on the parenting books page.
Several of my favourite
books about parenting are by Ross Campbell, an American Christian writer.
Rookie Moms Handbook I, who read
NO books about parenting or babies or anything, really love this book because it's about the mom instead of being about the baby, like almost every other book out there.
Take some classes, participate in women's groups in your community or your church, and read some good
books about parenting.
Even though I've written
a book about parenting, the process of building a happy family continues to evolve, and after raising four children over a period of thirty - six years, there are a few things that stand out as lessons learned.
This is another real - talk
book about parenting.
She is the founder of the Aware Parenting Institute and author of several other
books about parents and children.
If you only buy one
book about parenting, I would recommend one by Ross Campbell.
This month we are back to
a book about parenting (we alternate with personal growth) and I'm excited to delve into Calm Parents, Happy Kids: The... -LCB- read more -RCB-
If you want to read an absolutely hilarious
book about parenting, check out «Dad Is Fat» by Jim Gaffigan.
Holly Kretschmar and Julie Gamberg are two parents, writers, and educators who live in Los Angeles and are writing
a book about parenting tools.
Love and Logic Magic for Early Childhood: Practical Parenting from Birth to Six Years by Jim Fay and Charles Fay is an excellent
book about parenting after pregnancy.
Not exact matches
In excerpts released from the
book, Princess Caroline (his older sister) was candid
about her relationship with her
parents, specifically her mother who was film - star - turned - princess Grace Kelly.
Wood also lent her voice to the
book, telling a story
about a fun night that the she had with Caroline and Albert after they were upset they had been left behind while their
parents attended the wedding of King Constantine and Queen Anne - Marie.
Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks suggests a title of particular interest to anyone working in tech (and
parents): «This alarming
book is
about the generation born after 1995 who've grown up with cell phones, Instagram, and the rest.
'' [They] come into the world as their
parents» sole princess or prince,» wrote Jeffrey Kluger, author of the
book «The Sibling Effect: What the Bonds Among Brothers and Sisters Reveal
About Us» in an article for «Time.»
Liberal MLA Mary Polak (Langley) was instrumental as a Surrey School Board trustee in banning gay - positive
books from Surrey Schools: The
book ban was later struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada which said «instead of proceeding on the basis of respect for all types of families, the Board proceeded on an exclusionary philosophy, acting on the concern of certain
parents about the morality of same - sex relationships, without considering the interest of same - sex
parented families and the children who belong to them in receiving equal recognition and respect in the school system.»
Haaretz: With help of popular taboo - breaking
book, Haredim teach children
about sexual abuse The success of a new
book aimed at helping ultra-Orthodox
parents teach their children how to protect themselves from sexual abuse is a strong indication that a community once reluctant to acknowledge the crime is now beginning to face reality.
The groundbreaking work that Daniel Patrick Moynihan did in 1965, on the black family, is an example — along with the critical research of psychologist Judith Wallerstein over several decades on the impact of divorce on children; Barbara Dafoe Whitehead's well - known work on the outcomes of single parenthood for children; Sara McLanahan and Gary Sandefur's seminal
book, Growing Up with a Single
Parent; and David Blankenhorn's Fatherless America, another lengthy summarization of the bad empirical news
about family breakup.
When the student heard the story circulating
about Cassie and went to speak the Cassie's
parents and their preacher the decision was made to stick to the story and publish their
book anyway.
In the coda, he speaks fondly of the joy he took in writing the
book, and he reminisces
about his childhood training by Methodist missionary
parents, «which prepared [him] to tell the Christian Story from the inside.»
I have worn out my copies of The Birth
Book: Everything You Need to Know to Have a Safe and Satisfying Birth (Sears
Parenting Library) and The Breastfeeding
Book: Everything You Need to Know
About Nursing Your Child from Birth Through Weaning, but this one was my Bible for my first baby.
The Baby
Book, Revised Edition: Everything You Need to Know
About Your Baby from Birth to Age Two (Sears
Parenting Library) by Dr. William Sears and Martha Sears, R.N..
One of my greatest delights of
parenting is holding a title out to a child with the words, «I remember loving these
books when I was
about your age.»
In her
book How to Raise an Adult, Julie Lythcott - Haims, a dean at Stanford University, tells horror stories
about parents who speak for, plan for, and advocate for their college - aged children, afraid to let go lest their precious charges....
Books such as Homosexuality, which incessantly talk
about the fears, frustrations, angers, and depressions involved in being homosexual, inadvertently reinforce the reasons why
parents hope their children will not be homosexual.
Seen
about Parents in Holy
Books as a Start?!
It's the only
book about homosexuality and the Church that I feel comfortable recommending to everyone — from my gay friends to my
parents.
As a child, my
parents took me to a Baptist worship service (my paternal grandparents were Baptists), and I didn't know it was any different at all until I asked a question
about a scripture I knew from the
Book of Mormon.
I often read
books that are more
about the idea / theology of
parenting and less
about the practical tips and strategies and examples so this was helpful.
Forget the Sophia drawings, David should do a coffee - table
book about «Biblical
Parents».
I was tempted at first to give maybe a 10 point list of advice for
parents going through deconstruction in front of their kids... things like let them see the
books you read and answer their curiosities
about them; teach your kids how to think, not how to believe; tell them everything you're going through and let them deal with what it means for them; ask them what they believe and listen objectively and engage in conversation
about it; openly share your struggles with what you're going through with the church and let them process it themselves, and so on.
(I am thinking
about writing a
book about techniques of
parenting, called It Doesn't Work.)
Struggling to get the ideas in this
book on paper has reminded us again and again of those persons who have taught us the most
about parent - child relationships — our own
parents and our three children.
What I think I'd like to do is to write
about it here in a series of posts, hand - in - hand with these homeschool
book posts, taking on what I think he gets right as well as assumptions
about children,
parenting, and education with which I take issue.
Thankfully, my
parents were voracious readers of such Carmelite luminaries as Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, and Thérèse of Lisieux, and their shelves brimmed with
books by and
about the saints.
I'm really excited
about this
book, it's pre-ordered it as a late birthday gift for me and a second copy is on order to give to my
parents for the holidays.
With summer almost over and dear old Golden Rule days upon us — in all its
book - slinging, homework - bringing glory —
parents have enough to worry
about.
It's so nice to eat freshly made food instead of pulling everything out of the freezer... and trying to remember to do that
about an hour before lunch to bake on time... So here is another audience who would appreciate this
book: stay at home
parents who are having lunch alone at home or a
parent plus one or two small appetites for the second portion.
It doesn't seem to matter that I am not her target audience (new
parents)... I still adore her work and jumped at the chance to review her
about - to - be-published
book here on my blog.
Unless you have been living under a rock for the past few months, you must have heard the buzz
about the new
book from the Paleo
Parents, Matt McCarry and Stacy Toth.
The research
about two
parent households, blacks and whites, with the same educational background, age, and years of employment having similar household incomes was from research by Thomas Sowell in the late 80's — it was cited in one of his
books (I think «Ethnic America») and he talks
about that research in many of his lectures, some of which are on YouTube.
And for
parents who are looking for some age - appropriate information
about «the birds and the bees» check out It's Not the Stork: A Book About Girls, Boys, Babies, Bodies, Families and Friends and a review of it over on Punn
about «the birds and the bees» check out It's Not the Stork: A
Book About Girls, Boys, Babies, Bodies, Families and Friends and a review of it over on Punn
About Girls, Boys, Babies, Bodies, Families and Friends and a review of it over on Punnybop.
«
Parents could begin with a discussion of current events and the news, reading children's
books about important historical figures who have championed social equalities, encouraging children to participate in small acts to conserve water and resources, and visits to urban and rural areas,» she says.
The
book includes a Reading Guide that provides helpful historical context, and a Note to
Parents, Caregivers, and Educators
about the importance of teaching LGBTQ history and culture to children.
Rosemarie Scolaro Moser's new
book, Ahead of the Game: The
Parent's Guide to Youth Sports Concussion (University Press of New England) is just what it says it is: a practical, no - nonsense guide for
parents about sport concussions.
Pulitzer Prize - winning journalist Mark Ethridge, president of Carolina
Parenting Inc., fulfilled a dream in 2006 by writing a
book titled Grievances,
about the shooting of an African American teenager in a small southern town and the young, hotshot reporter who is consumed with the need to shine light on the tragedy and solve the killing.
Without this blog — where I first began to feel for my voice writing
about parenting — the
book wouldn't have happened.