Posts Tagged ‘Parents’

Teenage Parenting — Teenager Developmental Needs

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

In Teenage Parenting, understanding teenager developmental needs will help parents to respond appropriately to the situation and this will help in reducing conflict and defiance. In Teenage Parenting, we will look at the different teenager development needs.

One of the primary teenager developmental needs is the need to become independent of their parent. It is a self preservation instinct for teenager to develop an independent streak. This is the time when the teenager will be testing the parent limit and breaking rules in order to establish his independence. Here the parent has to figure out where they need to compromise or negotiate and where they need to stand firm.

As teenagers become independent of their parents, they will start to define their own identity .This is where it is normal for the teenagers to reject their parent ideas, opinions and values in favor of their friend ideas, opinions and values. The parent has to accept this fact and not to be too emotional about it.

While searching for their own identity, they do not want to appear weak especially to their peers and parents. When in a situation that has the potential to lead into a conflict, find a way for your teenager to give in gracefully without the teenager appearing to be weak or childish.

Teenagers typically give their mothers a more difficult time than their fathers during the developmental need stage. Teenager will identify who is the weaker link and will then attack and test that weak link to get what he or she want. In our society , the mother has a bigger exposure to the teenager as the mother spend a lot more time with the teenager than the father and also the father is usually the authoritative figure in the family. This is why the mother is usually given a more difficult time by the teenager. The father needs to provide support to the mother and act as a team in dealing with the situation.

Friends begin to play a bigger role during the teenager development need stage .This is a stage where the teenager will spend more time with friends than with the parent. Here the teenager will want to develop closer peer relationship to fulfill a sense of belonging in the group. The parent should play a role in supporting the teenager need but should set negotiable and non negotiable boundaries to ensure a safe environment for the teenager.

In Teenage Parenting, you will discover that there are more than 150 proven techniques that can help parents to deal with various teenager issues.

Where to Look for the Perfect Parenting Resource

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

All parents need a good parenting resource of their own. Since parenting is such a tough occupation a parenting resource can help make things easier for any parent. How and where can a parent find a relevant parenting resource? There is no one sure and perfect parenting resource for everyone. A parent may have to determine for himself/herself which parenting resource is helpful and applicable. There are however specific areas where one can get a parenting resource. You can get your parenting resource from the following:

The Book and Video Haven

Any place where they sell or lend a vast selection of books and videos may be a parenting resource. You can go around looking for a bestseller parenting resource or something created by experts in the field of parenting and psychology to get a good parenting resource. Surprisingly, an experiential parenting resource account or even fictional stories of parenting may be useful parenting resource for the discriminating parent.

Comprehensive Sites and Links

Not surprisingly, the internet can have every kind of parenting resource imaginable. You have the option of checking out sites that will provide you with a comprehensive parenting resource section or one that will provide you with specific parenting resource information. You can also check link or .net sites if you want to have a brief overview of some other sites that may be good places for a parenting resource.

Message Boards and Others

You may prefer a parenting resource that’s highly practical and that comes from people who have actually experienced parenting. You can use parents’ forums and message boards as your parenting resource. In this kind of parenting resource you can swap stories and practical tips and information. A lot of parents may warm up to this kind of parenting resource because it is conversational, light and a fun way to go about talking about parenting.

Formal Classes and Support Groups

A clear and structured parenting resource may come from such formal areas as parenting courses and support groups. This type of

parenting resource will surely offer highly professional pieces of information. There is no doubt that if you enroll in a parenting resource class, you will get a load of theories and actual practice accounts from trained professionals in the field of parenting. Support groups can also offer parenting resource that may be both categorized as formal expert quality and personally supportive and uplifting in nature.

People You Know

A practical parenting resource source would be people you actually know. Your own parents, family, friends and colleagues may each be a parenting resource. Ask these live, actual parenting resource people what they can share based on what they know and their experience. This may be the cheapest and best parenting resource you can ever have.

However and wherever you choose to get your parenting resource make sure that your parenting resource is applicable to you and your family. Remember, not all families are the same.

Getting Committed Tutors From a Singapore Home Tuition Agency

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

In Singapore, many parents and students want only committed tutors from tuition agencies. However, as much as they would like to recommend committed tutors , they cannot guarantee that all their tutors will be 100% committed due to various difficulties and reasons. From our past experience, below are some of the factors that may affect the suitability and commitment of the tutors :

 



Location

If a tutor’s student lives near his house, the tutor may settle for a lower tuition fee and may be more committed since he is able to cut down on travelling time and thus save on transportation fees.

It is therefore beneficial for a parent to provide a tuition agency with his or her postal code and/or detailed address, so that the tuition agency can find tutors as near to the parent’s residence as possible.

Salary

A tutor’s salary may not be the most important of all, but it is significant.

Tutors who take up a low-paying assignment may not commit for a long period. A tuition rate that is $10-15 less than the market rate may be acceptable to a tutor. However, if a parent pays about $50 less than the market rate, the tutor will most likely not commit for long. He or she may even feel unmotivated towards teaching as well.

It is well known that teaching is a respected profession; and MOE teachers nowadays are well paid by the ministry. So our advice to parents is that: give the tutors out there the rewards they deserve. The popular saying “Good stuff comes at a price” applies in this case as well.



Difficult Students

Usually, tutors want to commit their time to teach students who are keen to learn and improve. Moreover, tutors may not be able to help students who don’t wish to help themselves. It takes two hands to clap. So before a parent requests for a change of tutor, he or she should find out whether his child is keen to learn from the child’s tutor in the first place. In certain cases, it may not be the tutor’s fault at all when there is no academic improvement.

So, when a parent request for a tutor from a tuition agency, letting the agency know the character of the child may help the agency in finding the right tutor.