A guide based on the author's popular Parade column suggests hundreds of activities, skills, and experiences that parents can apply to help their children experience classic upbringings. Reprint. 25,000 first printing.
Discusses the difficulties in learning to accept adulthood in our youth-oriented culture and offers advice for learning to take responsibility and recognize the value of commitment and maturity
Mary Alice and Andy have drawn on their extensive experience in the classroom to assemble this collection: book/CD/DVD in one package, which includes fifty-four of their favorite movement activities for children in preschool, kindergarten ...
A post-World War II memoir of a childhood in working-class Pittsburgh "Alongside August Wilson and John Edgar Wideman, Richard Peterson is among the most evocative chroniclers of Pittsburgh, their colorful...
Talk to your kids about what you are reading and show them by your example that books are helpful and engaging. screen time and attention disorders Sevenyearold Keith returned from school on most days with red crayon colored in on his ...
Growing Up Human looks at how we have diverged from our ancestral roots to stay 'forever young' – or at least what seems like forever – and how the evolution of childhood is a critical part of the human story.
Growing Up takes the guesswork out of growing closer to the Lord and equipping others to do the same. - http://www.growingupseries.com/book-1.
This book offers practical insights and seasoned advice for every developmental milestone, from real parents as well as professional family educators.
Miller, Joanne. 1988. “Jobs and Work.” Pp. 327–359 in Neil J. Smelser, ed., Handbook of Sociology. Newbury Park, Calif.: Sage. Miller, Joanne, Carmi Schooler, Melvin L. Kohn, and Karen A. Miller. ... Chaimun Lee, and Michael D. Finch.
From how to handle the physical rollercoaster to coping with out-of-whack feelings, this book has your teen's back--so they can focus on all of the good stuff ahead.
Look at me. I have grown a lot. Now I can do almost everything by myself. But one thing still I can’t do alone. Can you guess what it is?