In addition, many post-menopausal women
often have fewer child - rearing responsibilities, allowing them to relax and enjoy intimacy with their partners.
Not exact matches
However, it's
often the case that the mistakes we make as
children have fewer long - range effects than things we screw up we get older.
DeWall's friends who
have kids
often recount mindlessly eating their
children's leftovers — a Chicken McNugget here, a
few French fries there.
Along with raising
children and keeping house, spirituality
has often been one of the
few serious pursuits which women
have been allowed and affirmed for.
But while schools
often provide help and support for pupils who are going through the break - up of their home,
few take into account the effect that
having a parent in prison can
have on a
child.
A study of military families, in which co-sleeping is common because fathers (and, nowadays, mothers) are
often away from home for extended periods, found that
children who
had coslept as babies received higher evaluations of their comportment in school and exhibited
fewer psychiatric problems.
Some studies
have found that
often a
child has a tantrum in reaction to how a parent responds to a situation, whether it's saying yes or no to buying a piece of candy at the grocery store or when a
child asks for a
few more minutes at the playground.
It's
often a good idea to warn your
children a minute or two before lights out: «We
have a
few more pages in this book, and then Mommy is going to turn out the light.»
Having a
few toys helps a
child focus well and develop ideas as they play with their toys
often, as opposed to touching on many toys infrequently.
TOO many
children are being left in equipment (car seats, infant seats, baby jumpers, baby walkers, baby swings, etc.) resulting, frankly, in «bucket baby» syndrome (unofficial professional observation as
children's fine motor skills
have been declining the past
few decades) the impact is
often not noticed until school age?
Children with physical, cognitive, or medical challenges
often have few opportunities to navigate the world without a parent close by.
If you do
have a
few guests their mums and dads should be welcome to stay as at this age
children will
often not separate from their parent
Riki Taubenblat, Certified Pediatric Sleep Consultant, tells Romper, «Smaller day cares that are located in a home environment and
have fewer children are
often willing to follow up with the parent's sleep training and may even provide a separate bedroom for naps, complete with white noise, and blackout curtains.»
If your
child has any health problems, such as unexpected weight loss or jaundice, you may see the pediatrician more
often in the first
few weeks.
Breastfed
children have fewer ear, respiratory and urinary tract infections and
have diarrhea less
often.
Another benefit of this approach is that it provides an avenue for supervised socializing since home schooled
children often have fewer opportunities to socialize.
Find out whether
children in daycare get sick more
often than kids who don't, and whether they
have fewer colds and other illne...
Lunch Tray readers
often contact me for help in getting junk food out of their
children's classrooms, but
few seem to know that as of next school year, districts will for the first time
have to impose a nutritional standard for classroom food.
In fact, she
often comments to her daughter who
has three
children that her youngest is ready for bed, needs to eat etc and she
has NEVER done that to me the last
few months (and she is not one to hold back saying anything, even if I am just her daughter IN LAW).
Items targeting seniors and
children had fewer calories, but
often exceeded the DRV for fat and sodium.
Doctors who discover that patients
have committed a criminal offense, such as downloading
child pornography, must
often report them to the police, so «
few people will come forward» to seek help, said forensic psychiatrist Donald Grubin from Newcastle University in the United Kingdom.
Prof. Maria Luisa Brandi MD, Professor of Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases at the University of Florence, Italy, lead author and Chair of the IOF Working Group on Skeletal Rare Diseases stated, «Due to the rarity of these diseases diagnosis is a challenge, and most patients — who are
often children — currently
have few choices when it comes to therapy.
Very
few children had severely low serum levels of vitamin
D. However, 20 %
had a serum vitamin
D level lower than 50 nmol / l, which is
often considered as a sufficient level.
In Germany, in the late 1800s, [an] incredible number of
children were dying
often of diarrhea and Escherich
had this radical idea that was called the germ theory of disease — that bacteria of all things can make you sick and very
few people really accepted this at that time, but Escherich thought that this was the best way to understand why these
children were dying.
Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are restless, inattentive, and impulsive, and they have difficulty with social functioning, often having fewer friends and being rejected more than children witho
Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are restless, inattentive, and impulsive, and they
have difficulty with social functioning,
often having fewer friends and being rejected more than
children witho
children without ADHD.
He points out that
children of low socio - economic levels
often have fewer opportunities to engage in learning experiences that will develop critical and creative thinking.
Few parents or business leaders know that disadvantaged
children often fall further behind the longer they are in school or that schools serving the disadvantaged
often have the least experienced teachers and suffer the highest rates of teacher turnover.
Debate continues about the validity of these findings, but there is no denying that these programs operated in a far different social and demographic setting than programs today and that they were «hothouse» programs: Run by top - notch specialists, the programs served
fewer than 200
children, cost at least $ 15,000 per
child per year in today's dollars,
often involved multiple years of services,
had well - trained teachers, and instructed parents on effective
child rearing.
The University of Maryland's Douglas Besharov calls them «hothouse programs,» noting that they were «run by top - notch specialists,... served
fewer than 200
children, cost at least $ 15,000 per
child per year in today's dollars,
often involved multiple years of services,
had well - trained teachers, and instructed parents on effective
child - rearing.
Because so
few regular classroom teachers
have received training in gifted education it is
often difficult for many of them to understand that gifted
children do not need constant review.
Parents
have had too
few options and too little power to compel school improvement and
often lack the resources to move so their
children can attend a better school.
One
would expect more serious discussion of a matter that removes so many
children from the formal learning environment for what
have often been minor infractions, but the Board was easily satisfied with a promise and a
few weeks of using changed policies.
During the past
few years, media reports
have highlighted an increase in the number of parents who are opting their
children out of annual state tests,
often called the opt - out movement.
Dr. King
would have been angered to see that we all too
often under - invest in disadvantaged students; that they still
have fewer opportunities to take rigorous college - prep courses in high school; that too many black, and brown, and low - income
children are still languishing in aging facilities and high schools that are little more than dropout factories.
These past
few months
have brought us together with many, many contacts, friends and colleagues in this field that some call social and emotional learning, others call character education, and that Peter
often refers to as whole
child education or «the other side of the report card.»
Research shows that they hear about 30 million
fewer words, they
have significantly lower exposure to books, and their impulse control and self - regulation —
often called executive function — tend to be less developed than in higher income
children.
In addition, many parents regret the decision as their
child gets older, as the strollers
often have fewer features than standalone models.
Older
children often get approval from school administrators to
have the puppy - in - training accompany them to school a
few days each week, once it's reached a certain stage of training.
After all, there are
few areas that are really «denied» to men, if the level of operations demanded be transcendent, responsible or rewarding enough: men who
have a need for «feminine» involvement with babies or
children gain status as pediatricians or
child psychologists, with a nurse (female) to do the more routine work; those who feel the urge for kitchen creativity may gain fame as master chefs; and, of course, men who yearn to fulfill themselves through what are
often termed «feminine» artistic interests can find themselves as painters or sculptors, rather than as volunteer museum aides or part time ceramists, as their female counterparts so
often end up doing; as far as scholarship is concerned, how many men
would be willing to change their jobs as teachers and researchers for those of unpaid, part - time research assistants and typists as well as full - time nannies and domestic workers?
The total fertility rate remains high in many countries not because women want many
children but because they are denied these technologies and information, and
often even the right to
have fewer children.
In these situations, for example, one parent will
have the
child reside with her / him most of the time and the other parent will get parenting time which is
often every other weekend or a
few days a month.
But more
often than not, you should not opt for a 20 year plan maybe because you
have a finite goal of higher education in 16 years which may be 15 or even 17 years depending on which school she gets through, which country, the rank, admission procedure, season of entry, etc. so these are considerations much later in life, when the
child is actually old enough to decide what she wants to study but as a parent you need to start way ahead and thus when you plan for her when she is only 5 years old, you need to financially plan for yourself so that your
child gets the lumpsum amount when she is 21 years old and does not need to wait for a
few more years for a better return, etc. the
child's future will not wait and thus as parent, you need to plan accordingly.
When
children have few experiences of success, they
often have to cope with disappointment and may come to view themselves in negative ways.
There are
few research or intervention programs designed to identify and address the specific needs of sandwiched individuals like myself to help them cope better.2 We know that members of the sandwiched generation (who care for young
children and aging parents)
often face burnout in their marriages, 2 which is feeling emotionally, physically, and mentally exhausted about the relationship.3 One group of researchers found that sandwiched couples who withdraw socially (e.g., pull away from friends) tend to
have the worst well - being compared to those who do not withdraw.4 Although sandwiched women typically reduce the their work hours (or quit their jobs altogether) more than men in order to cope with stress, 5 I
have never
had that luxury due to always being the sole breadwinner.
Have no rules and routines for children and the few rules that they may have are inconsistent and often broken to give in to the child's dem
Have no rules and routines for
children and the
few rules that they may
have are inconsistent and often broken to give in to the child's dem
have are inconsistent and
often broken to give in to the
child's demands
In contrast,
children rely mainly on
few attachment figures and
often lack the coping skills that adults
have refined.
Despite stereotypes of young fathers trying to escape the responsibilities of fatherhood, national demonstration projects such as the Teen Father Collaboration in the 1980s and the Young Unwed Fathers Pilot Project in the 1990s
have shown that young fathers are more involved in the lives of their families than
often assumed, particularly during the first
few years of their
child's life.
Unfortunately, parents
often have very
few child care options and limited ways to really know the quality of care their
child is receiving.
It is only logical that governments
would offer or support programs of equitable, case - specific assistance and support to all families who care for
children brought into government custody, yet adoptive families
often receive significantly less financial aid and
fewer services than foster parents.
The other problem is that a judge will only
have a
few hours worth of testimony and a report prepared by the family conciliation office to use to make the decision about where your
children will live and how
often they will see you.