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Gary Dumas joined KCRA 3 in the studio to talk about good emotional fitness for kids as they head back to class.
Kids also need to find their own ways to self-regulate, and they may be different from yours. Helping your child find an outlet (or outlets) for their anger may take experimentation.
Mental health experts say for children, anger issues often accompany other psychological conditions, including ADHD, autism, obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette’s syndrome.
Seven in 10 parents think they sometimes don't handle anger well and their kids may model that behavior, according to the University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll ...
Teaching children to control their emotions, especially anger, is difficult. We look at how another culture accomplishes this and learn about a powerful tool that American parents may be overlooking.
There’s been a shift away from one-stop anger management classes in many state court systems, says Shawn Cohn with Denver Juvenile Probation, especially for youth exhibiting signs of trauma.
Beyond the "terrible twos,” children from 4 to 44 can have an unhealthy relationship with anger. Whatever their age, it’s important to remember the feeling of anger is often not the problem.
Poetry can be fun. "When you write poems with kids, you see how immediately they get this," Matthew Burgess says. "If you read a poem aloud to kids, they start to dance in their seats." ...
We’ve all had those nights where an innocent game of Monopoly ends up making most of us want to fight each other, but according to a new study, that might actually be good for kids.