Great Kids

Helping Your Baby and Child Develop the Ten Essential Qualities for a Healthy, Happy Life

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Parenting
Cover of the book Great Kids by Stanley I Greenspan, Hachette Books
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Author: Stanley I Greenspan ISBN: 9780738211763
Publisher: Hachette Books Publication: September 10, 2007
Imprint: Da Capo Lifelong Books Language: English
Author: Stanley I Greenspan
ISBN: 9780738211763
Publisher: Hachette Books
Publication: September 10, 2007
Imprint: Da Capo Lifelong Books
Language: English

Parents all over the world have certain universal aspirations. They want their children to contribute meaningfully to society and to pursue their own dreams. But we appear to be missing the essentials. In this inspiring book, based on 30 years of research and practice, Dr. Stanley Greenspan redefines the qualities of an emotionally and intellectually healthy child and identifies the ways that parents can help their children develop each quality. The qualities that make us call a child a “great kid,” such as empathy, curiosity, and logical thinking, are fundamental and underlie all the academic, athletic, and social talents that a child might develop. We are not born with these traits, Greenspan demonstrates, they come from experience, which suggests that each and every parent can encourage them and that each and every child can strive to acquire them.

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Parents all over the world have certain universal aspirations. They want their children to contribute meaningfully to society and to pursue their own dreams. But we appear to be missing the essentials. In this inspiring book, based on 30 years of research and practice, Dr. Stanley Greenspan redefines the qualities of an emotionally and intellectually healthy child and identifies the ways that parents can help their children develop each quality. The qualities that make us call a child a “great kid,” such as empathy, curiosity, and logical thinking, are fundamental and underlie all the academic, athletic, and social talents that a child might develop. We are not born with these traits, Greenspan demonstrates, they come from experience, which suggests that each and every parent can encourage them and that each and every child can strive to acquire them.

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