Bobblehead Dad Parenting
Take a close look at your child’s class picture. If there’s 25 cute, smiling faces in that group, about seven of those kids are being raised by single parents. Maybe more depending on where you live. ...
info_outline 224 - The Importance of Laughing with KidsBobblehead Dad Parenting
Today’s show is sure to do two things: Make you laugh. And make you think about laughing! ...
info_outline 223 - What To Do When Your Kids Fight!Bobblehead Dad Parenting
Here’s a show for all us parents who go bonkers with kids who fight, bicker, argue, and cause constant chaos within our family unit. ...
info_outline 222 - Are You Raising Free-Range Kids?Bobblehead Dad Parenting
This show will make you think about how you parent. ...
info_outline 221 - Awesome Science Experiments Make Awesome Memories!Bobblehead Dad Parenting
wants you to have some fun with your kids. ...
info_outline 220 - Teaching Kids About MoneyBobblehead Dad Parenting
Fact: 1% of kids in our country save money....
info_outline 219 - Author Whit Honea Talks About Empathy. And Much More!Bobblehead Dad Parenting
Author has something to share with you. He wants you to stop and think about the way you communicate with your kids. The way you teach them about the world and each other. Bottom line, he wants to remind you about the importance of raising kids who understand human connection - and empathy. ...
info_outline 218 - Bullying: What Parents Need to KnowBobblehead Dad Parenting
Did you know that 160,000 kids skip school every day for fear of being a victim of bullying? Did you know that bullying has three players? And did you know that your child will likely play one of those three roles sometime in the course of their youth? ...
info_outline 217 - Understanding Your Kid's Stress - And Helping them Navigate Through It SuccessfullyBobblehead Dad Parenting
Success in high school starts years earlier - so this is a show for parents with kids of all ages....
info_outline 216 - Dads & Daughters: A Chat with Jeff BogleBobblehead Dad Parenting
Today we're talking with Jeff Bogle, dad of two daughters and one of the best writers ( out there. ...
info_outlineThis show will make you think about how you parent.
Lenore Skenazy became a media sensation a few years ago when she published a column describing how she allowed her nine-year old child to ride the New York subway system. Alone. Overnight she became a topic of discussion on television shows, radio call-ins, and parent play groups everywhere. Some viewed her as the World’s Worst Mom. Others viewed her as simply parenting with practical wisdom. And, thus, Lenore’s “Free-Range Kids” platform was born.
Join in the conversation today as Lenore shares thoughts on what exactly it means to raise “Free-range” kids. She shares insights about just how safe kids really are today (a lot safer than kids were when we were all growing up!), why failure is a good thing, and why it’s critically important for a child to experience their own world without Mom or Dad constantly hovering over them. Lenore Skenazy and host Jim Higley ask: How were you brought up? What kind of supervision did you have? (What about your parents before you?) How does your own upbringing differ from that of your children or your parents?
“If we only think of childhood in terms of risk, we’re only thinking about half of the equation, ” explains Skenazy. “You have to think in terms of risk/benefit.” She further shares compelling wisdom about what a child actually loses when a parent places rigid boundaries around their world. Have you been placing these detrimental types of boundaries on your child?
“Our children are safer and more competent than pop culture wants us to believe,” says Lenore Skenazy. Are you afraid of your child being abducted? Of their grades falling behind? Of them failing in every conceivable way without your constant guidance? Listen in and hear what Lenore has to say. Even if you don’t agree with everything she has to say, her perspective on parenting will get you thinking!
References from this Podcast:
Free-Range Kids Website