Category: Mental Health

Understanding the Emotional Aspects of ADHD

Dr. Tali Shenfield

This article helps parents navigate the emotional landscape of ADHD, including the triggers that may cause a child to shut down, as well as hidden signs of anxiety. It explains techniques for building confidence, resilience and self-regulation skills in ADHD children. While ADHD certainly affects emotions, through compassionate support and evidence-based strategies, the condition’s impact can be minimized. Every ...

Continue Reading

4 Mistakes To Avoid When Helping Your Anxious Teen

Dr. Tali Shenfield

For parents and teens alike, adolescence is a nerve-wracking time. Given the succession of rapid physical and psychological changes teens go through, it’s understandable that they tend to be anxious and pensive from time to time. For some teens, however, this anxiety becomes chronic and even debilitating. If your teen is one of the 25% who live with an anxiety ...

Continue Reading

Mastering Attentiveness: How To Enhance Executive Functioning In Your Child

Dr. Tali Shenfield

If you are the parent of a hyperactive, inattentive, or forgetful child, you know how destructive such behaviours can be: Schoolwork goes uncompleted, rooms remain messy, toys stay strewn around the house where they could easily cause injury, etc. No matter how much you scold, encourage, or plead with your child, he (or she) just doesn't seem to learn; moreover, ...

Continue Reading

How To Recognize The Signs Of Learning Disabilities By Grade

Dr. Tali Shenfield

As children grow older, their behaviours change dramatically. While a hysterical tantrum over something minor is completely normal at two years of age, for example, at age ten or twelve it’s often considered aberrant and troubling. Just as acceptable behaviours change dramatically throughout the process of development, so too do the signs of learning disabilities. For parents and teachers ...

Continue Reading

Popular Articles

Psycho-Educational Assessments: Guidelines for Parents

You may have been approached by your child’s teacher or you may have noticed yourself that your child is ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Hypersensitivity: Helping your Sensitive Child

The human brain processes all sensory information whether or not you are fully aware of it. Most children are able ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Psychological Issues Faced by Adopted Children

While most of the issues adopted children face while growing up differ little from the challenges experienced by non-adopted children, ...

ArrowContinue Reading

8 Ways To Help Your Child Calm An Anxious Mind

Dr. Tali Shenfield

If you are the parent of an anxious child, you probably find yourself occasionally wondering whether or not you have done something “wrong,” something that made your child develop a perpetually worried mind. While such concerns are normal, you can rest assured that the answer is likely “no”; an elevated level of vigilance is simply endemic to the minds of ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Recognizing and Treating ADHD in Young Girls

Dr. Tali Shenfield

ADHD in girls manifests differently than the hyperactive stereotype, leading to many girls living with unidentified symptoms and real impairments. When most people think of a child with ADHD, they imagine a precocious youngster who never stops moving and rarely stops talking—a child who, in other words, embodies extreme extroversion. Nine times out of ten, this mental image depicts ...

ArrowContinue Reading

How To Help Your Child Overcome Recurrent Nightmares

Dr. Tali Shenfield

Having your child sometimes wake up and cry out in fear, or come running into your room desperate for you to protect him from a "monster" is a troubling yet relatively common experience. Though basic parental support and comfort (i.e. the offering of physical affection and assurances of safety), is often enough to allay a child's fears temporarily and ...

ArrowContinue Reading

What Parents Can Do To Prevent Cyberbullying

Anna Kaminsky

Children today are raised with their social lives never far from reach, having access to wireless communication devices typically as soon as they reach school age. In an era when safety concerns are paramount and many households are eschewing the use of a land line, equipping even young children with mobile devices can feel more like a necessity than a ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Free Online Tests