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The Heart of Parenting

How to Raise an Emotionally Intelligent Child

Parámetros

  • 256 páginas
  • 9 horas de lectura

Más información sobre el libro

In <i>Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child</i>, psychology professor John Gottman explores the emotional relationship between parents and children. It's not enough to simply reject an authoritarian model of parenting, Gottman says. A parent needs to be concerned with the quality of emotional interactions. Gottman, author of <i>Why Marriages Succeed or Fail</i>, and coauthor Joan Declaire focus first on the parent (a "know thyself" approach), and provide a series of exercises to assess parenting styles and emotional self-awareness. The authors identify a five-step "emotion coaching" process to help teach children how to recognize and address their feelings, which includes becoming aware of the child's emotions; recognizing that dealing with these emotions is an opportunity for intimacy; listening empathetically; helping the child label emotions; setting limits; and problem-solving. Chapters on divorce, fathering, and age-based differences in emotional development help make Gottman's teachings detailed and useful. <i>--Ericka Lutz</i>

Compra de libros

The Heart of Parenting, John Mordechai Gottman, Joan Declaire, Daniel Goleman

Idioma
Publicado en
1997
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Tapa blanda),
Estado del libro
Bueno
Precio
39,99 €

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Título
The Heart of Parenting
Subtítulo
How to Raise an Emotionally Intelligent Child
Idioma
Inglés
Publicado en
1997
Formato
Tapa blanda
Páginas
256
ISBN10
0747533121
ISBN13
9780747533122
Serie
Descripción
In <i>Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child</i>, psychology professor John Gottman explores the emotional relationship between parents and children. It's not enough to simply reject an authoritarian model of parenting, Gottman says. A parent needs to be concerned with the quality of emotional interactions. Gottman, author of <i>Why Marriages Succeed or Fail</i>, and coauthor Joan Declaire focus first on the parent (a "know thyself" approach), and provide a series of exercises to assess parenting styles and emotional self-awareness. The authors identify a five-step "emotion coaching" process to help teach children how to recognize and address their feelings, which includes becoming aware of the child's emotions; recognizing that dealing with these emotions is an opportunity for intimacy; listening empathetically; helping the child label emotions; setting limits; and problem-solving. Chapters on divorce, fathering, and age-based differences in emotional development help make Gottman's teachings detailed and useful. <i>--Ericka Lutz</i>