As one
child psychologist noted, «Compared with conventional parenting where the mother and father have to constantly be «in love» in front of their child, co-parenting doesn't include the «strain» of marriage.
As one
child psychologist noted:
Not exact matches
Noted psychologist Selma Fraiberg agrees with Segal's opinion that
children may indeed benefit from an excess of mothering:
In his book The Evolution of Desire, evolutionary
psychologist David Buss
notes, «According to a United Nations study of millions of people in forty - five societies, 39 percent of divorces occur when there are no
children, 26 percent when there is only a single
child, 19 percent where there are two, and less than 3 percent when there are four or more.»
«In fact, if your twins come first, as mine did, it makes the next
child seem like a walk in the park,»
notes Dr. Lori Woodring, a
psychologist, author and mom of four, including twin 10 - year - old girls.
Psychologist, Dr. James F. Paulson
notes that research has found that most dads who deal with postnatal depression, experience it within three to six months after their
child is born (though other studies have found that it can occur gradually for up to one year after the
child is born).
Jean Piaget,
noted educational
psychologist of the twentieth century, developed a detailed theory about the developmental stages of
children's thinking.
«A well - stocked diaper bag allows you to reach in with one hand, without looking, and find everything you need,»
notes Dr. Lori Woodring, a
child psychologist and mom of four girls under 10.
Clinical
psychologist and relationship specialist Dr. Jeanette Raymond agrees,
noting that «maintaining a sense of caring authority at all times makes a
child feel safe.»
«Not only are there applications for healthy people to better realize their potential, but EEG - neurofeedback work has been extended to pathology, as in the case of
children with attentional disabilities and [transcranial magnetic stimulation] for depression,»
notes psychologist John Gruzelier of Goldsmiths College in London, who has been working on training musicians to control their own brain waves, thereby improving performance.
This developmental step also means that, «as they grow older,
children are more frightened by portrayals of abstract concepts,»
noted Nancy Eisenberg of Arizona State University in Tempe and Roxane Cohen Silver of the University of California, Irvine, in a paper published in the September issue of American
Psychologist.
As EliteSingles
psychologist Salama Marine
notes «there is a common misconception that finding love as a single parent is more difficult because having
children supposedly puts people off «1 and indeed, there can be some hurtful stereotypes about single parents2 - especially those on the dating scene.
Leo, a
psychologist, is hospitable if circumspect, but Ellen, a comparative literature professor, goes all in; once she meets Nancy and
notes a physical resemblance to Brooke, her yearning for this strange woman to be her long - lost
child turns into full - fledged conviction.
G. Stanley Hall, a
noted psychologist and president of Clark University, denounced the Committee of Ten's curriculum recommendations, because, he said, most high - school students were part of a «great army of incapables... who should be in schools for the dullards or subnormal
children.»
Noted psychologist Richard Weissbourd of the Harvard Graduate School of Education states, «
Children learn empathy not just by how we treat those closest to us but also by how we acknowledge the strangers around us.
WORKING TOGETHER In Raising Human Beings,
noted psychologist Ross W. Greene describes parenting as a partnership with your
child.
When your remarry, your adult
children quickly assess how having a stepparent will impact not only the
child's relationship with the natural parent, but also how it will impact traditions and holidays,
notes psychologist Susan Hickman.
Please
note that some diagnostic and treatment services by
child psychologists are reimbursable by state law.
Pioneering school
psychologist John Morgan
noted that
children dislike those adults who make them feel unintelligent, fearful, or ashamed.
The chapter Problem - Solving Skills Training and Parent Management Training for Oppositional Defiant Disorder and Conduct Disorder
notes that
psychologists address these behavioral problems through a combined treatment that includes the
child and his or her parents.
Such
psychologist defined parental alienation as a circumstance where one parent portrays the other parent in a negative light and the
child takes
note of such portrayal.
Please
note that while all therapists here work with
children, not all may be a registered
psychologist.