Dr. Rene is a recognized expert, coach and consultant on parenting and child development issues. She is the founder of Parenting Playgroups - Where Parents Learn and Children Play. Rene holds a PhD. in developmental psychology and a M.A. in school psychology. She is also the mother of two.
Building strong, healthy and happy
parent-child relationships.
Join now and have immediate access to Dr. Rene's recorded seminars on the topics below. In addition, as a member, you will have weekly access to Dr. Rene's live Q&A sessions where she will take your questions on any parenting topics.
| • Raising Boys v. Girls | • Travel with Children |
| • Overscheduling | • Risk and Resilience |
| • TV and Technology | • Teaching Personal Safety |
| • Social Aggression | • Positive Discipline Refresher |
| • Attention Issues/ADHD | • Play |
| • Parent Teacher Conferences | • Kindergarten Readines |
| • All About Toys | • Reading Aloud with Children |
Dr. Rene's Parenting Answers
| 06/18/2011 07:15 AM |
| We are on Youtube |
| So finally, there is a Dr. Rene on Parenting channel on youtube. We would love for you to visit, subscribe and give us some feedback! So far, it's just three clips but we hope to add more from live workshops and tours of our playspaces. Join us at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1C5ljLBysc. Thanks! |
| 06/13/2011 10:09 AM |
| Downtime Tips |
The American Academy of Pediatrics suggests children need an hour of downtime a day. Downtime is truly unstructured, go play time. It can be a child with friends or siblings but it doesn't have to be, the idea is it's up to them. This is child lead play when the individual child is in charge of their own agenda. It can truly be unproductive time, a half hour spent finding shapes in passing clouds or watching the rain drops on a window. If your children aren't up to an hour a day, set this as a goal. Here are some tips to get you started:
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| 04/25/2011 12:37 PM |
| Self-Esteem Tips - The Easy Way |
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Go deep in their interests. If your child is excited about dinosaurs go to the dinosaur museum, get the dinosaur books, puppets and videos, learn about paleontology online, go on a fossil dig. Share your own interests. If you are a gardener get them in the garden with you, get them a children's gardening kit. They know it's important to you and now you are sharing with them. Play with them. Play is their number one job through six years old, join them! Don't know how? Take a wider look at play. Play includes pretend play, dress-up, arts and crafts, board games, building blocks, movement games, sing-alongs, word play, floortime and more. Give them lots of social opportunity and coach when needed. A piece of self-esteem is feeling socially connected. Give children opportunities to develop good social and play skills often. If things aren't going well, look at why and work on it. Keep them challenged but not overwhelmed. If your child is managing 10 piece puzzles now, think 20 piece puzzles soon. If they are reading books with 3 sentences on a page, think 6 sentences. Constantly be thinking of the next step but go just a bit harder so you don't overwhelm. To learn more about this and other information about children's self-esteem, join Dr. Rene for an evening workshop on Self-Esteem, Wednesday May 11 from 7:00-9:00pm. To learn more and =register, please visit http://www.eventbrite.com/org/283710166?s=1328924. |
| 04/21/2011 09:06 AM |
| Calm Tips |
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There are two main ideas for how to manage tantrums once they start. Both ideas start with, "Stay calm yourself." I know, this can take a whole lot of self-control. It can be difficult to stay calm when your child is losing it. Part of it is recognizing that losing it yourself likely just adds fuel to the fire, takes the tantrum up a notch. The other part is realizing what your child needs most in these moments is someone who is calm, who is safe to connect to, who is modeling calm emotions especially when all else feels out of control. There are so many ways to stay calm. Of course, not every way works for every parent, so I am including calm tips in our emails often this year. Here are a few more ideas that may be helpful in tantrums as well as other times you need to stay calm.
To learn more ways to calm, join Dr. Rene for our two evening session on Calm Parenting. The next workshop series is offered on June 2 AND 9 from 7:00-9:00pm. For more information and to register, please visit http://www.eventbrite.com/org/283710166?s=1328924. |
Find more parenting answers in Rene's blog.


