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Help Your Child Deal With Stress - and Thrive
ISBN/GTIN

Help Your Child Deal With Stress - and Thrive

E-bookEPUBDRM AdobeE-book
EUR3,99

Product description

We are seeing a generation of children and teens with excessively high levels of stress, and, as a result, an explosion of health problems in young people today. But few parents recognise the 'hidden stressors' that their children are struggling with.

This book, previously published as Self-Reg, will give you the tools to help you recognise stress and understand your child's behaviour, and teach your stressed, emotional child to identify their 'big' emotions and get back on an even keel by themselves.

Stress can affect your child in many ways - whether it's exam pressure, pressure exerted by friends online or in the playground, or related to health, with lack of sleep and anxiety at home contributing. Help Your Child Deal With Stress - and Thrive is a ground-breaking parenting book, in which Dr Stuart Shanker argues that by teaching children the art of self-regulation, it can transform their behaviour and help them to identify, talk about and manage their emotions. This leads to a harmonious home, and children who feel nurtured and supported.

Mastering the art of self-regulation can help children learn to deal with experiences, overcome frustration, pay better attention, engage better with others and enhance their learning capabilities. In turn, children will develop the confidence, along with the skills and emotional strength needed to navigate the pressures and stresses of the modern world.

Underpinned by science, Dr Shanker's techniques have had a remarkable effect on children and parents alike, and hundreds of thousands of children who have gone through the programme in Canada have shown significant improvement in literacy, numeracy and behaviour.

'In this important and timely book, Stuart Shanker encourages us to see our children in a whole new light and gives us the tools we need to help nurture our young in order that they can better manage stress, build resiliency and improve their emotional health. Today's pupils are under serious pressure to perform; by helping children recognize, identify and talk about their emotions, we can help them find balance and ultimately realise their true potential.' - Sir Anthony Seldon, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Buckingham, co-founder of Action for Happiness and best-selling author
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Details

Additional ISBN/GTIN9781444788693
Product TypeE-book
BindingE-book
FormatEPUB
Format noteDRM Adobe
Publishing date30/06/2016
LanguageEnglish
File size964 Kbytes
Article no.7912734
CatalogsVC
Data source no.1272303
Product groupBU484
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Expectant parents get almost as many unsolicited book recommendations as they do pieces of advice from their friends, family ... and strangers on the street.
This recommendation comes every bit as unsolicited of course but I cannot help but think it should be prescribed by every doctor in the world after the first positive pregnancy test (even before in fact).
Oster is an economist and she has made it her mission to analyse the best data out there to help women make good decisions about their pregnancies (and by extension their partners too). If the long list of pregnancy prohibitions has ever seemed strange to you, this book will help you to differentiate between the very real dangers of some substances on your baby and the foods and drinks that really aren't that dangerous at all.
Oster's explicit goal is to help people make good evidence-based decisions so the book doesn't judge those who prefer ultra caution but it does help put the choice back into pregnant women's lives.
In Anbetracht von über 2,5 Millionen allein-und getrennterziehenden Elternteilen in Deutschland scheint es im ersten Moment merkwürdig, dass es so wenig Literatur für und über dieses Familienmodell gibt. Einmal kurz nachgedacht oder einen Blick in Anne Dittmanns neues Buch geworfen und man versteht: Die Betroffenen haben selten die finanziellen und zeitlichen Ressourcen, um neben der anstrengenden Bewältigung von Job und Carearbeit auch noch über die vielfältigen Ungerechtigkeiten, mit denen sie konfrontiert sind, aufzuklären.
Die Journalistin und Speakerin Anne Dittmann berichtet in "Solo, selbst und ständig" aufrüttelnd und informativ sowohl über ihre persönliche Geschichte als auch über drängende gesellschaftliche Fragen, gibt wertvolle Hinweise und macht Mut.

Absolut notwendige Lektüre für alle. Vor allem für die, die sich endlich gesehen fühlen und die, die sich heute noch nicht vorstellen können, einmal Soloeltern zu sein, aber auch für Arbeitgebende und Freund*innen.
Dieser gut verständliche und sehr anschaulich geschriebene Ratgeber hat mir beim Verständnis meiner Kinder und mir selbst sehr geholfen. Fallbeispiele wechseln sich im Buch ab mit Erläuterungen und "Selber-mach-Angeboten". Wer möchte, kann sehr tief einsteigen. Aber schon die Erläuterung bestimmter Situationen aus Kindersicht und das tiefe Verständnis von Eltern- und Kinderproblemen ergibt viele "Aha-Momente" und ich werde das Buch sicher wieder hervorholen.
Das Buch beginnt mit einer Art Gebrauchsanleitung. Denn die grundlegende Idee ist, die einzelnen Kapitel (Zusammenziehen/Schwangerschaft/Kinder/Rente etc.) in bestimmte Abschnitte zu unterteilen: Utopie, Wirklichkeit, Praxisbeispiel und Was Du tun kannst mit Tipps/Hard Facts/Buchempfehlungen u.ä.
Ich gebe gerne zu, dass mich der Aufbau am Anfang leicht irritiert hat - aber: er funktioniert. Sich dabei zu beobachten, wie man auf die Utopien reagiert, ist spannend - erst recht, wenn man danach liest, wie es in der Realität bei den meisten ausschaut. Die Handlungsempfehlungen am Ende fand ich ebenfalls gut - gespickt mit Begriffserklärungen und weitergehenden Buchtipps.
Da ich schon länger Mutter bin :) und schon einige Bücher dieser Art gelesen habe, waren mir die Themen bzw. die Lösungsansätze zum Großteil schon bekannt. Trotzdem habe ich noch einiges zum Nachdenken sowie viele weitere Leseempfehlungen bekommen.

Für Menschen, die in Partnerschaften leben und gerade, wenn Kinder ein eventuell anstehendes Thema sind, ist dieses Buch als Einstieg ein absoluter Lesetipp.
Due to mostly male-focused research and media representation, autism is under- if not mis-diagnosed in women and girls. So I had hopes that this book could shed light on such a complex topic. It kinda did?
After a brief introduction on why women are underdiagnosed, the book follows this structure: symptoms description - comparison with a fictional character - tips on how to approach each of those symptoms in a woman in the spectrum.
Even though this isn't itself a bad thing, it didn't provide (to me at least) any new information, and I wish real people had been referenced - as well as people in the mild part of the spectrum; moreover, studies and papers had been used, but they were never directly referenced.
I wouldn't necessarily say this book is useless, and if you don't know anything about the topic and want to read into it, then go ahead!
Otherwise you might be disappointed.
Jane Austen is a writer ruined by TV adaptation (before you all start writing letters, I know there are good ones). Despite two centuries of inclusion in the canon, there are still many (and I am afraid they are mostly men) who dismiss her as 'frivolous', 'saccharine' or 'unserious'. This means it is only worth continuing to discuss Austen with people if they either don't use any of the aforementioned adjectives or if, by the latter, they mean, she is one of the funniest writers in English (full stop). If you don't know this already, the first page of 'Persuasion' will convince you, and then her biting, satirical commentary on Georgian society will show you that far from reverently writing about it out of admiration, she irreverently lambasts it and its eccentric snobbish hierarchy (people who write her off will probably say John Oliver likes Trump because both wear suits). If you don't believe me (and even if you do), read her (and start with 'Persuasion') before you watch her.

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