Y3K Tutor In Your Home

Problem To Look For When Kids Hate School #4: Social Challenges & Loneliness

March 25, 2013 By Y3K

SOCIAL CHALLENGES and LONELINESS – Some kids have a hard time in large groups and/or making friends. If this is the case for your child, the school day can be a place of isolation, awkwardness and sadness. It makes sense for one to hate being trapped 6 hours a day in a place that feels so awful.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: children, depression, disabilities, elementary school, high school, kids, middle school, popularity, social skills, teenagers, young children

Problem To Look For When Kids Hate School #3: Crisis

March 23, 2013 By Y3K

CRISIS – If your child or family is experiencing some kind of crisis, sometimes children feel safer to be at home. Crisis can drain all of the energy out of a person and a school environment requires a lot of energy to be successful.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: children, depression, distraction, elementary school, high school, in home, kids, middle school, teenagers, victim

Problem To Look For When Kids Hate School #2: Bullying

March 20, 2013 By Y3K

BULLYING – If your child is the victim of bullying or harassment, staying out of school appears to be better. Who would want to be in a constant situation of feeling unsafe and fearing for your life every day?

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bullying, children, depression, elementary school, high school, kids, middle school, safety, stress, students, teenagers, victim

Problem To Look For When Kids Hate School #1: Self-Esteem

March 18, 2013 By Y3K

SELF-ESTEEM – Kids that feel bad about themselves and abilities most likely hate school too. A lot of kids that are deemed “special ed” are discouraged that they are not achieving at the level they want to.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 504 Plans, ADD, ADHD, attitude, Autism, children, depression, education, elementary school, embarrassment, executive function, failure, high school, kids, middle school, OCD, PDD, SPED, students, teenagers, Title 1, Tourette's syndrome

Helping Children Cope After a Tramatic News Event

December 14, 2012 By Y3K

In response to a traumatic news event (such as a school shooting tragedy), many children may have questions and concerns. Y3K Tutor In Your Home offers the following suggestions to help guide parents and caring adults to best support children who may be grieving, concerned, or troubled by a terrible event:

Be Supportive

Children will benefit greatly from support and caring expressed by the adults in their lives. Create an environment in your home that encourages respect for each other’s feelings and fears, and allows for a supportive, healing environment.

Be Available

Let children know that you are available to talk with them.

Let children ask questions.

It is ok if you do not have answers to all the questions. It is ok to let your child know that you do not have the answer but that you will try and find out.

Be Caring

Let children know about the support being provided to students, friends, and families of the victims.

Be aware of children who may have experienced a previous trauma and may be more vulnerable to experiencing prolonged or intense reactions and will need extra support.

Be Reassuring

Acknowledge the frightening parts of the event.

Explain what happened in words that children understand. Explanations should be appropriate to the child’s age, developmental stage, and language skills.

Reassure children that they are loved and will be taken care of.

Children who have concerns about siblings who are living on a college campus or have concerns about safety at their own school should be reassured and their concerns validated.

Be Thoughtful

Be aware of how you talk about the event and cope with the tragedy.

Children learn about how to react to traumatic situations by watching and listening to parents, peers, and the media.

Reduce or eliminate your child’s exposure to television images and news coverage of the shooting. The frightening images and repetition of the scenes can be disturbing for children. If they do see coverage, be sure to talk with them about what they saw and what they understood about the coverage. Make sure to correct any misunderstanding or misinterpretations.

Maintain your child’s routines as best as possible.

Be Creative

For children who are too young to talk or do not feel comfortable talking about their feelings, expressive techniques such as play, art and music can provide additional ways for children to express their feelings and let you know what may be troubling them.

It might be difficult for them to grasp exactly what the situation is all about, but you should try your best to enable them to understand these things in their own way.

Many behaviors and symptoms of stress are normal for children who have just experienced a trauma. However, if you find that your child is preoccupied with the event, has ongoing sleep or eating disturbances, is experiencing intrusive thoughts or worries, is focused on fears about death, or is having difficulty going to school and leaving parents, your child should be evaluated by a mental health professional. Contact your pediatrician or school counselor if you feel that the symptoms are persisting and are interfering with your child’s daily routines.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: advice, childhood, controversy, depression, elementary school, parenting, routines, school, tutor, young children

Winter Happiness

December 22, 2009 By Y3K

Full spectrum lights copy sunlight and fool the brain into thinking it’s natural sunlight. Light in a sunlight frequency makes people happier.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: assisted technology, brain, depression, health, inspiration, winter

Winter

December 19, 2009 By Y3K

Cold, gray winter days can cause some students to feel depressed and lose focus. Plenty of bright light and lively colors make a difference.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: depression, focus, winter

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