Teaching your pre schooler about emotions

Teaching Your Preschooler About Emotions

Preschoolers go through many many emotions every day, and you can help them interpret their feeling and support them in dealing with them.

headphones

PLAYING: Teaching Your Preschooler About Emotions

2 min read

Preschoolers go through many many emotions every day, and you can help them interpret their feeling and support them in dealing with them. By helping your child communicate his feelings better, you give him the social and emotional tools to deal with tense situations and to understand themselves better.

Start by teaching them the right words for their feelings and emotions. Don’t complicate things: stick with angry, happy, scared, sad, but use some descriptive ones too, such as hungry, frustrated, excited, and so on. Having a name for what they’re feeling helps them communicate it. (TIP: Create a mood chart, with little simple drawings, and the name of the emotion under it. This will teach your child to identify how he’s feeling, simply by pointing at a picture.)

Next, try to introduce the emotions he’s learning into story time or activity time. This entails you pointing out some emotions that the characters in the story are going through, or pointing out how your child is reacting to certain parts of the story.

Leave the guilt and the shame out of it. Let him express himself however he feels comfortable, without having to worry about being judged by you for feeling a certain way. Encourage him to express his feelings appropriately rather than keep them to himself or letting them out in harmful ways.

Share your own feelings with him, using calm and descriptive language. He will learn about emotions by experiencing them, but also by seeing how you react to things.


Reference:

http://www.livestrong.com/article/169456-how-to-teach-preschool-children-about-emotions-feelings/

To The Left or To The Right?

To The Left or To The Right?

While you won’t really know if your child is left-handed or right-handed before he 2 or 3, there are some signs that may give you a hint, and some kids show a clear preference for one or the other as early as 18 months.

My Kid, The Artist

My Kid, The Artist

Your little toddler is now discovering drawing and colors, and it’s an exciting time for him, as his drawing skills evolve over time.

Learning to Speak

Kids Learning to Speak

There is no one point at which your child learns to talk. 

Learning to Self-Feed

Learning to Self-Feed

Before you know it, your child is going to start reaching for your food and her eyes will start following your utensil movements.