Why Good Parents Have Bad Kids
Author: Hayes, E. Kent
ISBN: 9780385417341
Publisher: RANDOM HOUSE US
Year first published: 01 Jan 1991
Pages: 224
Format: Paperback / softback
Even well-meaning parents can, through lack of awareness, neglect their children's most basic needs. And neglect can take many forms-from overindulgence to lack of communications. E. Kent Hayes has spent a lifetime working to advocate for children and their family. He has gleaned those lessons into this guidebook that explains how to avoid trouble before it starts and how to-br>br>. Instill the value of delayed gratification in children who want it i>now/i>br>.Create a flexible day-to-day structurebr>.Talk with a noncommunicative teenagerbr>.Balance permissiveness and disciplinebr>.Help your child deal with negative peer pressurebr>.Handle problems, such as drug abuse, teen pregnancy, and vandalismbr>.Laugh with your childbr>.Build a lifelong loving relationship with your childbr>br>i>Why Good Parents Have Bad Kids/i>isessential reading for every parent, written by a noted child advocate and juvenile criminologist.
ISBN: 9780385417341
Publisher: RANDOM HOUSE US
Year first published: 01 Jan 1991
Pages: 224
Format: Paperback / softback
Even well-meaning parents can, through lack of awareness, neglect their children's most basic needs. And neglect can take many forms-from overindulgence to lack of communications. E. Kent Hayes has spent a lifetime working to advocate for children and their family. He has gleaned those lessons into this guidebook that explains how to avoid trouble before it starts and how to-br>br>. Instill the value of delayed gratification in children who want it i>now/i>br>.Create a flexible day-to-day structurebr>.Talk with a noncommunicative teenagerbr>.Balance permissiveness and disciplinebr>.Help your child deal with negative peer pressurebr>.Handle problems, such as drug abuse, teen pregnancy, and vandalismbr>.Laugh with your childbr>.Build a lifelong loving relationship with your childbr>br>i>Why Good Parents Have Bad Kids/i>isessential reading for every parent, written by a noted child advocate and juvenile criminologist.