#fine-motor-skills

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#adhd
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Brain-Based Parenting Shift That Can Help Kids With ADHD

ADHD challenges stem from executive function differences, not motivation or capability; children struggle with attention, memory, and follow-through rather than understanding expectations.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Brain-Based Parenting Shift That Can Help Kids With ADHD

ADHD challenges stem from executive function differences, not motivation or capability; children struggle with attention, memory, and follow-through rather than understanding expectations.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Why Your Kids Can't Stop Squishing NeeDoh

NeeDoh has been successful, in part because it provides an outlet for stress relief. But the appeal runs deeper than anxiety management as it taps into the human need for tactile stimulation.
Fashion & style
#autism
Parenting
fromScary Mommy
5 days ago

Reminder: That 'Bad Kid' You're Judging Could Very Well Be Autistic

Judgmental societal norms create pressure on autistic individuals and their caregivers, leading to feelings of inadequacy and misunderstanding.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

My Child Has Autism: How Do I Know the Program Is Working?

If the application of behavioral techniques does not produce large enough effects for practical value, then the application has failed. Practical value is whatever you define as meaningful for your child's life.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Play, for All (Hu)mankind: Peeling Out Where No Men Had Peeled Out Before

Play is hard to tamp down, and exuberance breaks through even as busy spacefarers are carrying along the weighty hopes of humanity.
Science
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Parenting a Child With Pathological Demand Avoidance

Pathological demand avoidance (PDA) is a behavior pattern where children perceive demands as threats to their autonomy, leading to challenging behaviors.
#child-development
Parenting
fromScary Mommy
1 month ago

Why Experts Say Boredom Is Actually Good for Kids

Unstructured boredom activates the brain's default mode network, fostering creativity, emotional regulation, and self-reflection essential for child development.
fromIndependent
1 month ago
Parenting

My child lashes out at school when they have to share - how can we help them practise sharing at home?

Parenting
fromScary Mommy
1 month ago

Why Experts Say Boredom Is Actually Good for Kids

Unstructured boredom activates the brain's default mode network, fostering creativity, emotional regulation, and self-reflection essential for child development.
fromIndependent
1 month ago
Parenting

My child lashes out at school when they have to share - how can we help them practise sharing at home?

Education
fromScary Mommy
2 weeks ago

How Inquiry-Based Preschool Helps Kids Think For Themselves

Preschool is crucial for early brain development and fosters lifelong learning and critical thinking skills through inquiry-based education.
fromDaily Mom magazine
1 week ago

Toddler Fun: Engaging Outdoor Activities For 2 Year Olds

Outdoor sensory play is a fun and educational way for babies and toddlers to explore the world. Activities like digging in soil or feeling different textures promote hand-eye coordination and early science learning.
Parenting
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

2 Signs Your Sensitive Child Is Stuck in a Thought Spiral

Sensitive kids often overthink situations, leading to emotional overload and difficulty letting go of thoughts.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
3 weeks ago

Let Kids Be Kids? The Ethics of Maximizing Children's Talents

Children are increasingly pushed to maximize their athletic talent from a very young age, often at the expense of social and academic development.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
4 weeks ago

Our son loved the outdoors invisible illness means he now can't walk or talk

Tomos Sleep suffers from severe ME, leaving him unable to walk or talk, highlighting the lack of support for those with this condition in Wales.
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

A Parent's Guide to Child-Centered Play Therapy

Child-Centered Play Therapy (CCPT) relies on the child-therapist relationship to facilitate therapeutic change through child-led play.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

Psychology says people who compulsively tidy and reorganize aren't control freaks - they learned early that the one thing they could control was the physical space around them - Silicon Canals

Compulsive tidying is a response to anxiety, rooted in a need for control and predictability in unpredictable environments.
Design
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

school storage units transform into modular sensory furniture for early childhood education

TRIMINÓ is a modular furniture system for early childhood education that integrates sensory learning features into interactive storage units, supporting motor skills and literacy development through everyday use.
fromDaily Mom magazine
3 weeks ago

Special Needs Summer Camp For Children, Special Needs Camp

Special needs summer camps are specialized programs designed for children and young adults with a range of disabilities, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), ADHD, Down syndrome, and other developmental or physical challenges.
Parenting
Education
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Your Child's Pediatrician May Be Able To Provide Literacy Screenings

Pediatric centers are screening children as young as 3 for literacy skills to address declining reading proficiency.
Parenting
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

Parents: A valuable source of AI intelligence

AI-assisted parenting tools are being developed by parents who understand the real challenges of childcare.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Handwriting Is Better for Your Brain Than Typing

Handwriting activates motor, language, and attention systems more fully than typing, improving memory through deeper processing and supporting cognitive health.
Education
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Cursive is back. But should students be learning the skill?

A middle school cursive club in Virginia has sparked widespread interest in reviving cursive writing instruction across multiple states.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

New Insights on the Evolution of Right- and Left-Handedness

The fighting hypothesis proposes that there is a so-called frequency-dependent maintenance of left-handedness. The main idea is that over the tens of thousands of years of human evolution, left-handers did have an advantage in fights due to a surprise effect. This gives them an evolutionary survival benefit since they win more fights.
Psychology
fromDaily Mom magazine
1 month ago

20+ Toddler Busy Bag Ideas: Entertain Littles With Exciting Activities

Busy bags are like secret weapons for moms who need a few moments of peace without turning to screens. They're fun, easy to put together, and full of creative play that toddlers and preschoolers will actually enjoy.
Parenting
Typography
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Left-Handers Are Better at Mirror-Writing Than Right-Handers

Left-handers demonstrate significantly faster and more accurate mirror-writing abilities compared to right-handers, supported by scientific research.
#childhood-anxiety
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Question That Keeps Anxious Kids Awake at Night

Anxious children experience intense nighttime worry loops driven by overthinking, and reassurance paradoxically increases anxiety by reinforcing the need for certainty.
E-Commerce
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

9 Products To Help Little Kids Navigate Big Emotions

BuzzFeed Shopping provides vetted, reader-first product recommendations, fact-checking brand claims and offering diverse, authentic options across budgets.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

When Autism and ADHD Travel Together

AuDHD—being both autistic and ADHD—affects 50-70% of autistic people and 20-65% of ADHD individuals, yet remains underdiagnosed due to diagnostic overshadowing and historical clinical restrictions.
Productivity
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Executive Function Myths That Need to Go

Executive function struggles do not reflect character or morality, and myths conflating the two harm personal growth and self-compassion.
Humor
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How to Help Your Child Develop a Sense of Humor

A healthy sense of humor boosts confidence, social and relationship skills, relaxation, and health, and adults can teach it by modeling and encouraging age-appropriate humor.
Music
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Blending Music and Talk Therapies for Kids and Teens

Music therapy offers evidence-based, developmentally appropriate support for children and adolescents to express emotions, improve communication, reduce stress, and foster psychological growth.
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Born to dance! Babies have a sense of rhythm from birth, study claims

For the study, a team from the Italian Institute of Technology played J.S. Bach's piano compositions for an audience of 49 sleeping newborns. This included 10 original melodies and four shuffled songs with scrambled melodies and pitches. While the babies listened, the researchers used electroencephalography - electrodes placed on their heads - to measure their brainwaves. When the babies showed signs of surprise, it meant they expected the song to go one way, but it went another.
Science
Education
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Uneven Development Matters in Dyslexia

Dyslexia involves unexpected reading difficulty despite strong cognitive abilities; removing this concept from definitions risks harming students' education by obscuring their strengths.
#profound-autism
fromwww.bbc.com
2 months ago

The clock is ticking for my five-year-old son with dementia

I woke up and had a panic attack that morning because the next 365 days can be crucial because of what he has got,
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

What Parents Should Know About Oppositional Defiant Disorder

When a child is labeled "oppositional," adults often assume the problem is the child. In my experience as a child psychiatrist, the truth is often much more complicated. Both families sought out these schools, believing they were giving their children the best education possible. Instead, the schools failed their children, labeling them "oppositional" and "defiant" rather than addressing the root causes of their behavior.
Mental health
#sensory-play
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Family Science Approach to Parenting

Modern parenting culture emphasizes achievement and comparison, creating emotional communication challenges that stem from broader social patterns of productivity and performance expectations.
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

There's No Such Thing as a Child Expert

No true parenting or child experts exist because children are unique, fallible, and inconsistent individuals; expertise in parenting strategies does not equate to understanding your specific child better than you do.
Education
fromNature
2 months ago

How learning handwriting trains the brain: the science behind the cursive wars

Cursive penmanship is being reinstated in schools because pen-based letter production activates the brain more than typing, though cursive-specific benefits remain limited.
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Fostering Independence in Teens and Young Adults with ADHD

Parenting teens with ADHD requires balancing safety with autonomy while building executive function skills through intentional capacity-building rather than rule enforcement.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

What Happens When a Child's Thoughts Don't Turn Off?

Parental reassurance fuels children's overthinking-driven anxiety; pausing, acknowledging, containing worries, and engaging the child helps interrupt worry loops and reduce anxiety.
Education
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

A New Study Questions Everything We Knew About Early Talent

Early specialization predicts early wins but not ultimate elite adult performance; top adult performers typically emerge from broader, slower development.
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

Only children aren't lonely - psychology says they often develop these 7 exceptional qualities - Silicon Canals

Growing up, I heard it constantly: "Oh, you must have been so lonely as an only child." People would look at my friend Emma with this mix of pity and concern, as if she'd been raised by wolves instead of loving parents. They'd ask if she wished for siblings, assuming her childhood was some tragic tale of isolation and imaginary friends.
Psychology
Education
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

Teachers can tell which children are truly loved and which are only taken care of-here are 7 signs they notice right away - Silicon Canals

Teachers can quickly detect whether children feel genuinely loved at home through subtle, consistent behavioral cues rather than material signs.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

3 Green Flags of Neurodiversity-Affirming Autism Evaluations

Neurodiversity-affirming autism assessments center the individual's lived experience through respectful, collaborative evaluation and avoid stereotype-based diagnoses.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Am I Left-Handed or Mixed-Handed?

Handedness exists in three forms: left, right, and mixed, with many individuals unaware of mixed-handedness and mixed-handedness measurable by questionnaires.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
3 months ago

Is It Time to See Dyslexia as a Superpower?

Dyslexia often reflects distinctive cognitive strengths under the MIND framework rather than only a reading disorder, enabling specialized learning styles and potential advantages.
Psychology
fromBig Think
2 months ago

How training your gaze could help you master sports - and your own attention

Superior visual search strategies and eye-movement use distinguish some elite athletes from less-skilled players, enabling exceptional performance despite ordinary physical attributes.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Raise the kids you have

You need to raise the children you have-not the ones you would have liked to have. This statement captures the essence of effective parenting: accepting your children's inherent nature rather than imposing your idealized vision upon them.
Parenting
Parenting
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Toddlers in mascara? Dance teachers and parents rethink stage makeup

Removing makeup and strict appearance rules in early-years dance promotes inclusivity, reduces cost and pressure, and emphasizes joy, movement and student comfort.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

When Your Child Has a Glass-Half-Empty Mindset

We sit down for dinner. Declan (5) whines, 'You didn't get me my milk!' Not, 'Thank you so much for this delicious meal you have made after a long workday, Mommy. Can I please have some milk?' We get to the playground, and he complains, 'You didn't bring the right pail!' We read three books at bedtime, he accuses, 'We didn't get to read my favorite book about the pandas (because he hadn't chosen it!) The whining is out of control and driving us mad.
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

A Parent's Guide to Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors

Body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRBs), like hair pulling, skin picking, and nail biting, can take up a lot of space in a family's life. Not just in bathrooms and bedrooms, but in conversations, emotions, and worries about the future. Parents want to help, kids want relief, and everyone is exhausted by the cycle of noticing, reminding, trying harder, and feeling discouraged.
Parenting
Parenting
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

Refresh Your Kiddo's Toy Collection With These 28 Fun Products

Varied-size, colored, and weighted wooden stacking rocks create a challenging, engaging toy that encourages patience, fine motor practice, and open-ended play.
#parenting
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago
Parenting

We didn't need childcare, but we still paid $7,500 to send our toddler to a program for 4 hours a week. It helped her build independence.

fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago
Parenting

We didn't need childcare, but we still paid $7,500 to send our toddler to a program for 4 hours a week. It helped her build independence.

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