Topic: social skills

How to Improve Your Child’s Conversation Skills?

Dr. Tali Shenfield

Children are experiencing a historic disruption in social development. The Covid-19 pandemic rapidly accelerated the preexisting trend of kids relying on digital devices (rather than face-to-face conversation) to stay in touch with peers, a phenomenon linked to language delays and increased social anxiety. Kids with poor communication skills also have more difficulties with academic learning, and research shows they face ...

ArrowContinue Reading

How to Practice Social Situations with Your Child?

Dr. Tali Shenfield

  Having well-developed social skills is fundamental to achieving personal success and happiness. Social skills help kids express themselves, advocate for their needs, collaborate with others, and establish strong, fulfilling relationships. Without adequate social skills, children often become isolated and prone to emotional and behavioural problems, which may lead to more severe issues later in life. Kids learn the bulk ...

ArrowContinue Reading

The Importance of Play in Social Skills Development

Dr. Tali Shenfield

In modern Western society, we typically view play as being separate from learning. However, while children’s games appear casual and spontaneous, they serve many crucial developmental functions. When kids engage in unstructured social activities, they use their imaginations to simulate diverse experiences, which serve as a model for real-life situations. They learn how to negotiate and cooperate with other ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Developing Social Skills in Young Children

Dr. Tali Shenfield

Some children adapt readily to peer socialization, but many struggle to find acceptance and form strong bonds with other children. Sometimes, this difficulty is related to a learning or developmental disorder (like High Functioning Autism or ADHD), in which case your child should receive both professional and parental assistance in building better social skills. In other cases, kids flounder socially ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Popular Articles

Effective Discipline Methods for Proactive Parenting

So here you are. Your child has done something wrong or hasn’t done something they should have done. In ...

ArrowContinue Reading

How To Help Your Child Lose Weight And Preserve His Self-Esteem

For the parents of overweight children, every day is a balancing act; on one hand, there is the natural desire ...

ArrowContinue Reading

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

How to Teach Your Child to Stop Interrupting

Dr. Tali Shenfield

Frequent interruptions are a fact of life for the parents of young children. Preschool-aged kids seldom wait for their turn to speak, even when their parents are occupied with an activity or speaking to someone else. Though this behaviour can feel disruptive, it’s not intentionally rude; toddlers are only just emerging from infancy, so they still think that the ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Understanding Your Preschooler’s Behaviour

Dr. Tali Shenfield

The preschool years are a time of incredible discovery. Your cuddly, wide-eyed infant is developing into his (or her) own little person. He’s starting to voice his own opinions, assert his independence, and explore the world around him in earnest. Alas, while toddlers are a joy to watch, they can be a challenge to parent. It’s not that ...

ArrowContinue Reading

When Your Child With Learning Disability Doesn’t Fit In

Dr. Tali Shenfield

When we hear the phrase “learning disability,” the first thing that usually springs to mind is the image of a child who struggles to read or stay focused at school. We immediately think of the academic issues these kids face and overlook what is, for them, often the most upsetting aspect of being “different”: Not fitting in. The vast majority ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Helping Asperger’s Teens To Survive and Thrive: 15 Key Steps

Anna Kaminsky

For children with Asperger’s Syndrome and High Functioning Autism (HFA), change is hard; all their lives they have struggled with the confusing and troubling nature of the highly changeable world around them — then suddenly, with the advent of the teen years, the changes become internal, too. Hormonal fluctuations, the quest for self-identity, and the pressure of trying to be ...

ArrowContinue Reading

Free Online Tests