How to Have Incredible Conversations With Your Child

£14.99

What’s going on at school? Is your child feeling OK? What are their hopes, dreams and fears? This book unpacks the art of meaningful conversations between parents and children. Written by top psychologists, it is uniquely designed for you to read and experience together. It is a place to have a conversation. It guides and supports you and your child to build a stronger relationship, laying the foundation for your child’s communication skills, improving mental and physical wellbeing, throughout life.

ISBN: 9781787756403 Author: Gilmour, Jane Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers Publication Date: 21st October 2021 Imprint: Jessica Kingsley Publishers Cover: Paperback Dewey: 649.1 (edition:23) Pages: 192 Language: English Readership: College - higher education / Code: F Category:

You: “How was your day?”

Your child: “Fine.”

As a parent, you want to know what is going on in your child’s life, how school and friendships are going, if they’re feeling okay. As a kid you want to tell your parent what’s going on, but it can be hard to find the words. This book is brilliant because it makes finding those words easy, and you discover incredible stuff about each other.

How exactly do you make it happen? This accessible guide answers the million-dollar question by steering you, step by step through carefully supported and structured conversational platforms that encourage connection and strengthen relationship bonds. Written by two top clinical psychologists who have worked with families over many years they have, uniquely, designed it for you to read and experience, together.

Inside this book you will find a range of fun, illustrated child-friendly conversation activities, organised around four key themes: who are you? how are you? what helps? what gets in the way?

There is powerful evidence that building good parent-child communication skills improves emotional wellbeing, physical health, academic and employment success. It helps set up a trusting relationship so you can navigate adolescence and later life successfully. It’s important to start early because it takes time to learn skills.

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