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How To Raise A Modern Day Joseph Blog Tour and Review

June 29, 2009 by Parent Tips · Leave a Comment 

Review I found this to be a wonderful resource that I wish had been around when my kids were younger. The book starts before your child is born, encouraging new parents to discuss how they are going to raise their child and progresses through the years with helpful tips, checklists, appropriate memory verses, etc. You can pick up anywhere in your child's development with this book and see some positive results. Does it guarantee they'll turn out great? Of course not, but the odds are in y

52 Tips for New Parents 52 Series

April 28, 2009 by Parent Tips · Leave a Comment 

52 Tips for New Parents 52 Series




These 52 practical tips are just the thing to help new parents ease into parenthood, including suggestions for ways to reduce isolation, calm a screamer, and make sure you keep your social life.

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Parenting Gifted Kids Tips for Raising Happy And Successful Children

April 28, 2009 by Parent Tips · Leave a Comment 

Parenting Gifted Kids Tips for Raising Happy And Successful Children




Parenting Gifted Kids: Tips for Raising Happy and Successful Children by James R. Delisle (Professor of Gifted Education at Kent State University) is an informative and “parent friendly” reference for enabling a truly gifted child to expressively and productively achieve their life goals, develop sound character, and generally enjoy his or her life. Examining overly excitable children, the type of gift granted to each child, working with the school system, dealing with perfectionist children, being a positive role model, building a child’s character, and helping kids achieve their set goals and dreams, Parenting Gifted Kids is very highly recommended reading, especially to all new parents of a gifted child. –
—James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief, Midwest Book Review

Parenting Gifted Kids: Tips for Raising Happy and Successful Children provides a humorous, engaging, and encouraging look at raising gifted children in our world today. Jim Delisle, well-known for his experience in the area of social and emotional needs of gifted children, once again comes to the rescue of parents by offering practical, down-to-earth advice that is very likely to challenge parents to reexamine the ways they perceive and relate to their children. –
Gifted Child Today, Vol. 29, No. 4, Fall 2006

Parenting Gifted Kids: Tips for Raising Happy and Successful Children by teacher, counselor, college professor, and parent James R. Delisle is an expert collection of tactful and educated approaches to children. Deftly examining and exploring the findings of child-psychology and his experiences of more than 30 years of working with children, Professor Delisle offers his readers a cogent understanding of giftedness in children, how to work with the school system, dealing with perfectionism in gifted children, being an adult role model for children, building a child’s character, and helping kids achieve their goals and dreams. For its clear, concise, and incalcuable practical information, Parenting Gifted Kids is very highly recommended for all parents, counselors, and teachers of a gifted child. –
—James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief, Midwest Book Review

Parenting Gifted Kids: Tips for Raising Happy and Successful Children by James R. Delisle (Professor of Gifted Education at Kent State University) is an informative and “parent friendly” reference for enabling a truly gifted child to expressively and productively achieve their life goals, develop sound character, and generally enjoy their life. Examining overly excitable children, the type of gift granted to each child, working with the school system, dealing with perfectionist children, being a positive role model, building a child’s character, and helping kids achieve their set goals and dreams, Parenting Gifted Kids is very highly recommended reading, especially to all new parents of a gifted child. –
—James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief, Midwest Book Review

Parenting Gifted Kids: Tips for Raising Happy and Successful Children by teacher, counselor, college professor, and parent James R. Delisle is an expert collection of tactful and educated approaches to children. Deftly examining and exploring the findings of child-psychology and his experiences of over thirty years of working with children, Professor Delisle offers his readers a cogent understanding of giftedness in children, how to work with the school system, dealing with perfectionism in gifted children, being an adult role model for children, building a child’s character, and helping kids achieve their goals and dreams. For its clear, concise, and incalcuable practical information, Parenting Gifted Kids is very highly recommended for all parents, counselors, and teachers of a gifted child. –
—James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief, Midwest Book Review

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Mercifully, omits testing info
A book for parents who know their child is gifted and who want to learn about their child’s inner landscape. Not for parents who are wondering HOW to get their child into their school’s gifted program. I checked out many books from the public library, looking for one like this. The others devote multiple early chapters to testing, which was a moot point for me.

Have been recommending it to other TAG parents as the “if you’re only going to read one book on giftedness, this is it” book.

5 Stars Excellent Resource!
This is an excellent resource for parents seeking to raise a child who is intellectually, socially, emotionally and spiritually balanced, as well as productive. — It offers real world advice concerning advocacy for and understanding of the gifted and talented, while reminding parents that gifted and talented children are just that — children.

I recommend this book over any other I’ve read thus far. It is enjoyable, exceptionally readable, and chok-full of insight and information.

4 Stars Help your child be happy: read this and “THE DRAMA OF THE GIFTED CHILD”
As a gifted child, I wish my parents had not understood me as gifted, but understood why I loved being the best at everything, i.e. why it was so important for me, and why I was losing my childhood to it. Not that it is bad to be the best, but it doesn’t make our children happy. I wish my parents had helped me break the deep feeling (and illusion) that I was loved when others acknowledged my being gifted…which inevitably came with the deep feeling of doubt about whether I was loved when I was not great. I wish they had helped me relax, made me feel loved unconditionally, helped me find out what “I” liked and focus on that, and most importantly, stop the emotionally empty pursuit of continuing to be “the gifted child”, stop looking for the excitement of compliments as an illusion of love. Feeling unconditionally loved by your parents is feeling that you can be ordinary at something, or that if you don’t like that game you don’t have to play it and if you play it, you can be ordinary at it (invest less time and focus on having fun rather than being “great”), and still know for sure, deeply, without having to test it, that your parents will always love you anyway. If your child is almost always great, by definition he/she does not feel/know for sure that you love him/her unconditionally.

As parents, it is our responsibility to help our child be happy, rather than extraordinary. When your child is gifted and extraordinary, the best you can offer is not encourage him/her to be great (he/she’s already doing that) but rather 1) for you to gain the insight of why he/she feels it is so important to be the best at everything, why he or she invests so much emotional energy in getting your and other people’s compliments, and 2) help him/her feel loved unconditionally, that it is perfectly fine to be ordinary at some things, by expressing your love “especially” when he or she is ordinary–that is when you should express the most love to your child–to tame his/her deep-rooted emotional illusion that compliments = love, because of what it also means in his/her heart: that no compliments = no love. Read this book and especially “the Drama of the Gifted Child”, so you truly help your child, so he/she doesn’t have to read the book in 10 to 20 years and has to mourn the loss of his/her childhood to being “gifted”.

4 Stars original approach
How happy I was to get a new perspective on the gifted parenting issue. Instead of a book merely listing the characteristics of gifted kids and the problems they face, this offered some new points. The included “Gifted Children Speak Out” section at the end of every chapter was very insightful and put everything I was reading in perspective; all the advice in the world can’t substitute for honest feelings given directly from the children themselves. I also really enjoyed the chapter on giftedness in adults. It was helpful both as a way for the reader to reflect on and remember his or her own gifted childhood, and as a reminder that our children are going to grow up, with characteristics that continue to affect them in adult life. Finally, the resource section at the back was full of schools, journals, web sites and other places to find additional information and support. Overall, a very thourough and insightful book.

5 Stars Fantastic!
This completely explained my child. Thank you for helping me to understand her and how her mind works. This is the beginning to parenting my child the way she needs.

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365 Tips For Babys First Year

April 28, 2009 by Parent Tips · Leave a Comment 

365 Tips For Babys First Year



User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars This Book of tips is a must for new parents
We loved this book and read it cover to cover in the beginning and reverted to it over and over again for its insightful tips that first year. Dr. Orenstein’s book contains tips that are not contained in other leading first-year baby treatises. We recommend it highly. We are now well on our way trough the Toddler version and think it is exceptional as well.

5 Stars Quick, Enjoyable Read
This is definitely not a know all, do all guide to babies but it definitely is very handy. There are tips in here on everything from diapering to soothing to taking baby out. These quick tips were a perfect read for those short trips I had to take on the bus while I was pregnant. It was also a book my husband didn’t mind reading. Most of the ‘guides’ I have are huge and you could easily overload on information. This one is perfect to add to your own common sense. A handy, lil book I’m sure you’ll enjoy.

5 Stars Other Considerations
As background material for this book, the reader is referred to “The Scientist in the Crib” (Dr. Gopnik, et al; Perrenial, 2001). It offers a fresh and detailed evaluation of the language acquisition process by infants. At about 6 months of age, a critical change seems to occur. The specific pronunciation patterns of the language(s) heard begin to be retained in a very focused manner. Also see “The Monday Tape” (The Snow Water Corporation) at Akilo.com for more insight into this process. This audio tape, one of a series, provides multilingual speech patterns for infants. These tapes are available exclusively through Amazon.com (not available in stores). It appears that they should help an infant (birth to age 2) gain good pronunciation skills for many widely used languages.

5 Stars That paper cover ain’t getting harder, ya know!
A five-star follow-up to “Crying Baby!” The 365 Tips saga continues as Dr. Julian, now conscripted into the ranks of the soldiers of Titan, devises plan after devious plan to trip up the evil Toddler. I can’t wait to see how it all turns out in “365 Ways to Stifle Your Teen’s Individuality and Keep Him Tied to Those Apron Strings!”

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