Helping Your Child Cope with Divorce
Continue the counseling for your son. If he needs more time than the school counselor is able to give, the school counselor or your pediatrician can refer you to a therapist in your community.
Talk with the teacher about working out a positive reward system for your son. Ask her to send you a daily note (could be as simple as a check mark or smiley face) to let you know how your son's day was, then follow up at home. A good day can earn a walk around the block just with you or an extra bedtime story; two or three good days in a week can earn having a friend over to play on the weekend. You can increase the amount of time required to earn a reward as your son's work improves.
Previous:High Expectations
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Gifted children can be a source of great joy and pride for their parents and teachers but they also present some unique problems as well. Gifted children can become disciplinary problems in classroom settings where they are not challenged intellectua
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Parents have a responsibility of teaching their children to behave properly. If your child behaves badly, you must discipline him to teach him right from wrong. According to Kidshealth.org, if parents are not consistent with punishments, their childr
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Q My seven-year-old is experiencing anxiety attacks in school, and it is getting increasingly worse. His teacher labeled him a perfectionist because he gets frustrated when he sees something new or feels that something is too difficult. Hes afraid t