Sentences with phrase «likely happen to your kids»

Most of all, you need to know what will likely happen to your kids.

Not exact matches

It is subject to demographic shifts... those under 40s who hold «modern» views are less likely to have a lot of kids than the ones who don't... and social preferences... morals were lax in the late 1700s and early 1800s but then the Victorian era happened.
The first few days and weeks of preschool leave kids feeling understandably exhausted - and it's when they're tired that accidents are more likely to happen.
While this is happening - we remain stuck in an institutionalized «fast food» serving model that is likely thickening children's waistlines and sending the wrong message to kids.
Sonna: From fostering deeply troubled children, I learned that misbehavior is most likely to happen when kids feel tired, hungry, cranky, sad, or bored — or simply don't know how to behave.
Although experts aren't sure how to prevent the withholding from happening in the first place, a 2003 study found that when parents talked positively about poop and praised their kids for pooping in their diapers prior to toilet training, their kids were just as likely to develop this problem as other kids, but they got over it more quickly than did children of parents who talked negatively about poop and who didn't praise their kids for pooping in diapers.
I suppose it would be fun to create a Plumknit pattern book someday or own a brick and mortar yarn store but with my kids so young and needing so much of my time and attention those things aren't likely to happen any time soon and I'm good with that.
Sooner or later, all kids learn that words can be powerful — and as you've probably found, this is likely to happen sooner rather than later.
By the time he can come to you and say that he would like to be sleeping in a big kid's bed, it's likely that he's now able to grasp what is happening, why it's happening, and what the rules are while it's happening.
Spill Proof: Kids are more likely to spill their water or anything that you give them, which means you want a bottle that is spill proof, to prevent it from happening.
Also, kids who watch a lot of TV are more likely to copy bad behavior they see on - screen and tend to «fear that the world is scary and that something bad will happen to them.»
(For example, working to stop bullying and build social skills among kids is much more likely to happen in an environment in which teachers model those behaviors in their interactions with kids and with one another.)
The selection criteria employed by these schools all but guarantee students who are likely to do well academically, which raises the question of whether the schools» generally impressive outcomes are caused by what happens inside them — their standards, curricula, teachers, homework — or are largely a function of what the kids bring with them.
But as Lake and her team points out in the case of Detroit (where the nine charter oversight groups — including Detroit Public Schools — have done little to provide kids with high - quality options), what likely ends up happening is that shoddy school operators end up engaging in shopping for lax authorizers who will let them off the hook for failure and won't think through community needs.
b) I think there are opportunities to increase pet ownership among older demographics who may be less likely to adopt because they no longer have kids or because the have concerns about who will care for a pet if something happens to them in their older age.
Those expectations include everything from what you believe you are entitled to get, to how the process is likely to go, and what you think should happen with the kids.
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