teaching positive thinking

by admin on April 22, 2008

teaching positive thinking
Can the positive experience taught at home overcome negative behavioral examples exhibited at ...?

... School? I have curiosity about what the community thinks about it. I work tirelessly to teach my child with special needs such as being educated, caring gentleman with pristine manners. I know can not be perfect, but I also know that even though it is far below the mark, which remains one of the best behaved children in the room ... anywhere. I worry constantly ... While that may be exaggerating ... I often worry .... that the behavior displayed in public school attending lessons muddy work so hard to instill in him. Do you think you can undo, at home, the negative taught at school?

I worry about exactly the same way as you, and I've found for good reason. As my school-age children and are growing, I see more and more of what happens in the home school. Not everything is bad, but a large number of behaviors that I've never seen it say that last year before my kindergarten student was in school all day. And not to change the subject, but I sent my children to a private Catholic school where faith and fear and love of God can be discussed, while all other factors are happening, not that it is a test full, but my guess is that it does not hurt! I found that my ** ** really good guys (well, maybe I'm exaggerating too) contains some of the behaviors undesirable school, but I still know what is acceptable behavior and what is not. Can push the limits, but parents provide the basis upon which everything else is based. Just my opinion ....

Positively MAD Teaching Tip #3: Positive Feedback: The PIPS Model

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