As a parent, you are constantly bombarded with information regarding your child and their wellbeing. Online articles, magazines, well-meaning friends and relatives, and socially-unaware strangers all have advice on how you should be tending to your child. In one way, this article is much the same, but in another, it comes with a caveat: no one knows your child better than you do.
The separation of parents can be quite a tough ordeal for any child to take. However, in some cases, getting a divorce can be a much healthier solution for children rather than seeing their parents unhappy and fighting all the time. Because a divorce can affect a child’s entire world it is important to make sure that they go through the least damage possible.
Here are a few tips to help your kids through a divorce.
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by Elaine Taylor-Klaus, ImpactADHD.com, ImpactParents.com
It may be the understatement of the year to say this, but sometimes you just have to speak the truth: We are parenting in complex times.
Special education is constantly evolving and adapting to meet the needs of our children and students. Simply consider popular education trend setters like Piaget, Vygotsky, or Reggio Emilia. Each revolutionary had new theories and ideas, but one thing in the learning world is always constant: change.
In today’s world most people tend to link physical activity with weight loss, and forget all the important benefits it brings to both our body and mind. For kids, especially, keeping physically active is a must, it helps improve their motor skills, get that extra energy out so that they can sleep better, and most importantly it teaches them discipline and commitment.


