Books Teach Children How to Help Each Other Children
who play organized sports learn how to cope with adult weaknesses often revealed during games and practices. We’ve all seen coaches, referees, and parent-fans fall apart and behave badly under the pressure of winning, losing, and dealing with unfairness directed at them, their team, or their children. Fortunately, the coaches help children understand the game, the parents’ reactions, and the attitudes of referees; the parents help the children understand the coaches; and the referees help youngsters understand the rules and how to ignore unruly fans, even if they are moms and dads and coaches.
It all helps. No sense in pretending to kids that adults always behave with wisdom and maturity. You can’t sell that one even to an eight year old. Plus, a lot of problems occur on the playing field, or on the ice, or in the gym that are observed and understood only by the youngsters involved. Many times, the solution to the problem involves children helping each other.
Reading stories that demonstrate how children cope with their problems and help each other gives children hope that they can deal with their problems, too, whatever they are. When you add the element of solving a mystery to all that, the book is a winner that will hook a child on reading: “Quick, tell me, tell me – what happens next? Who did it?”
Choose a children’s mystery for the youngster on your gift list and motivate the child to read more and read faster.
Creative Commons Attribution: Permission is granted to repost this article in its entirety with credit to Maureen Grenier and a clickable link back to this page.
Books Teach Children How to Help Each Other Children
who play organized sports learn how to cope with adult weaknesses often revealed during games and practices. We’ve all seen coaches, referees, and parent-fans fall apart and behave badly under the pressure of winning, losing, and dealing with unfairness directed at them, their team, or their children. Fortunately, the coaches help children understand the game, the parents’ reactions, and the attitudes of referees; the parents help the children understand the coaches; and the referees help youngsters understand the rules and how to ignore unruly fans, even if they are moms and dads and coaches.
It all helps. No sense in pretending to kids that adults always behave with wisdom and maturity. You can’t sell that one even to an eight year old. Plus, a lot of problems occur on the playing field, or on the ice, or in the gym that are observed and understood only by the youngsters involved. Many times, the solution to the problem involves children helping each other.
Reading stories that demonstrate how children cope with their problems and help each other gives children hope that they can deal with their problems, too, whatever they are. When you add the element of solving a mystery to all that, the book is a winner that will hook a child on reading: “Quick, tell me, tell me – what happens next? Who did it?”
Choose a children’s mystery for the youngster on your gift list and motivate the child to read more and read faster.
Creative Commons Attribution: Permission is granted to repost this article in its entirety with credit to Maureen Grenier and a clickable link back to this page.
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