Social • Emotional Spotlight
Social Emotional Spotlight – Sam’s Tips: Meal Prep
Let your child help with meal prep. I know you’re rolling your eyes at me right now, like cooking isn’t enough of a chore, right? Yes, it might get a little messy, but this can be a lot of fun. Kids love to help and feel really accomplished when they get to help with “adult” […] Learn More ›
January’s “Tip of the Month” Is: Name Feelings
This month encourages educators and parents to name and talk about feelings. Emotions can often feel very powerful and overwhelming, especially for children. The more we can identify feelings, both our own and those of the children in our care, the more we can start to manage those feelings. When we narrate our emotional experience, […] Learn More ›
Start the School Year off Right: The ABC’s of Communicating with Your Child’s Teachers
View Our Video At the beginning of each school year, I am often reminded of the saying, “It takes a village.” I have come to learn that my children’s successes are not a direct result of the lessons taught to them by my husband and me, but rather from the love and guidance given to […] Learn More ›
“Post” Pandemic Playdates: Providing opportunities for children to (re)connect
View Our Video After over two years of being in a Pandemic, it is no secret that our children have missed out on many critical social experiences. They were not given the opportunity to shop at grocery stores, dine in restaurants, or engage in play dates with other children; all things that as social beings […] Learn More ›
TANTRUMS: Torture Device or Teaching Opportunity?
View Our Video Whatever we choose to call them – meltdowns, outbursts, explosions, fits – children’s tantrums are a form of exquisite torture that leave parents far and wide feeling depleted, overwhelmed and incompetent. Tantrums happen when a child (or adult, for that matter) becomes flooded with uncomfortable feelings (e.g., sadness, anger, frustration, disappointment) that […] Learn More ›
Presuming Competence
View Our Video When I was growing up and I asked my mom how she knew to do all “the things,” she would say with a bit of sarcasm, “It’s in the parent handbook. You’ll get it too if you have a child.” I was in my late teens when I realized there is no […] Learn More ›