Wednesday, August 28, 2013

quote for Kids Play home bulletin board ?

best infant toys 2011
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raj


I have this bulletin board in my play school. I want to but a few quotes about play school, which inspires kids and parents, etc. Please help asap.


Answer
•When dealing with children, praise more, criticize less.

•Never say no to a gift from a child.

•Your children get only one childhood; think of this when you “don’t have time” to play, hug, kiss, and express your love for them. Make time for I’m sorry, I’m listening, I love you.

•You is smart, you is kind, you is important. [Kathryn Stockett in The Help]

•Children need models rather than critics. [Joseph Joubert (1754-1824)]

•You teach people how to treat you. It starts when your children are born. If you tolerate poor behavior, your kids will expect to get away with deplorable actions.

•There are two things you can and should give your child: roots and wings.

•Eliminate toy clutter. Children of all ages will play more creatively and independently with five toys than they will with 50.... Fewer toys allow a child to focus more effectively.... [John Rosemond in “Living With Children” 2011]

•Dealing with kids: It takes a thousand “attaboys” to erase a single “you're not good enough.” [Dr. Phil 2/12]

•A parent’s time is the coin of childhood. {Alema Pequoia}

•Children are our future: raise them with love and discipline; teach them respect and kindness.

•Children are natural mimics who act like their parents despite every effort to teach them good manners.

•Children seldom misquote you. In fact, they usually repeat word-for-word what you shouldn't have said.

•A child who learns to manage a little courtesy, even under pressure, is a child who is operating well in the world, a child with a positive prognosis.

•There’s nothing that can help you understand your beliefs more than trying to explain them to an inquisitive child. [Frank A. Clark]

•Treat the Earth well: it was not given to you by your parents; it was lent to you by your children. [Kenyan proverb]

•Manners (otherwise known as “social skills”) are at the heart of the whole parental enterprise. Every infant is born adorable but selfish and the center of the universe. It’s a parent’s job to teach children that there are other people, and that others have feelings that can be hurt.

•We are all children sometimes, in our heart of hearts. [Jude Morgan in Charlotte and Emily]

•Little child, little problems; big child, big problems. [Anna Quindlen in Every Last One]

•We don't get most of our fears as adults; we bring them from childhood. [David Wiltse in Close to the Bone]

•It’s easier to build strong children than to repair broken men. [Frederick Douglas]

•Instead of wishing away nine months of pregnancy, you should cherish every moment and realize that the wonderment growing inside you is the only chance in life to assist God in a miracle. [Erma Bombeck (1927-1996)] (baby, childbirth, life)

•In the same way that you cannot choose your parents, neither can you choose your children. [idea from “The Talented Mr. Ripley”]

•Fill a child’s bucket of self-esteem so full that the rest of the world can’t poke enough holes in it to drain it dry.

•The only role models who have an actual impact are the ones at home at your dinner table.

•God should double your patience when you marry and triple it when you have children. {Alema Pequoia}

•Spare the rod and spoil the child is a warning, not a commandment.

•Even children have good ideas sometimes, probably because they have not yet learned prejudice and obfuscation, and do not screen their possibilities. {Alema Pequoia}

•If you truly love your children, give them more time than anything else. Your time is really all you have that is genuinely yours to give. {Alema Pequoia}

•Remember: What you do, what you say, how you listen, what you allow to happen in your family and household is the attitude and behavior you are modeling for your children that they will absorb and apply to their own lives in the future. {Alema Pequoia}

•Pay attention—real attention—to a small child. The adults who did that when you were a kid are probably your role models.

•Parental Commandments: Be consistent. Actions have consequences. Say what you mean and mean it. Parents work together as a team. Don't make promises you can't keep. Listen to your children. Establish a routine. Respect is a two-way street. Positive reinforcement works much better than negative reinforcement. Manners are universal. Define your role as parents.

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My 1 year old wakes up at 4 am and screams, and he won't stop until we get him. How can I make it stop.?




Wardinger





Answer
Did GSU *REALLY* just call your child a pet? Your child is not a pet. Don't follow that advice and treat it like one. How insulting!

Don't leave your child alone when they are screaming at night. The reason the child might stop is because they have lost trust in you. Why would you want that?

The first stage of Erikson's theory on development is "Trust vs. Mistrust." The infant and toddler stages are a time for the child to realize that, when they need you the most, you are going to be there for them. If you loose that developmental stage at this point, it will carry through for the rest of their lives.

Let me say that again - If you loose that developmental stage at this point, it will carry through for the rest of their lives.

What kind of toys does your child have in his crib? A stuffed animal and a toy similar to these:

http://www.fisher-price.com/fp.aspx?st=2011&e=detail&selcat=bgtoys&pid=34168

may help him if he wakes up. He may be able to keep himself occupied and not become as afraid.

If you wear perfume, try lightly scenting a blanket with it and leaving it in his crib. Smell is the strongest association senses. That may help him quite a bit.

Does he have any lighting or is the room pitch black? Try a night light as this may help him feel more comfortable.

Remember that, at this age, if a child cannot see you, they might think you are no longer there. They do not necessarily have a concept yet that if you're not in their vision or sight of any of the other senses, you still exist. He is crying out of fear sometimes that he is alone. Give him the reassurance every time that you are there when you hear him. It is a LOT!!! of work, but the payoff is there in knowing you are doing what is best for your child.

I hope the other suggestions help some.

Matt




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