Bright Future

Bright Future Definitely more than investment for Filipino families. Learn the prime difference between an investment and a wise investment.

Improve your productivity, get things done, and find more time for what's most important with Time Management Tips. This...
28/06/2017

Improve your productivity, get things done, and find more time for what's most important with Time Management Tips. This weekly series provides actionable time management techniques to help people better manage their time and ultimately become more productive. Time management expert Dave Crenshaw provides a new tip every Monday, touching on a wide variety of topics. Tune in to learn about everything from managing emails and calendars to setting priorities, collaborating with coworkers, reducing interruptions, crafting a "productivity mindset," and creating a more comfortable and effective work environment.

Have an idea for a future video from Dave? Submit it using our course feedback form. If you want more time management strategies now, we recommend watching Dave's Time Management Fundamentals course.

Improve your productivity, get things done, and find more time for what's most important. Get new time management tips every Monday.

5 Ways to Promote Social and Emotional Development in Young ChildrenWhat is social and emotional learning, and why is it...
28/06/2017

5 Ways to Promote Social and Emotional Development in Young Children

What is social and emotional learning, and why is it important? In a nutshell, it’s recognizing our emotions, having some control over them, having empathy for others, handling conflict well, and making good choices about personal and social behavior. These skills are critical to school (and life) success. Believe it or not, these things need to be taught and the best time to begin is early! Guess what else: YOU are your child’s best teacher. So lets see how we can start.

1. Self-Awareness

This just means recognizing your own emotions. To promote your baby’s self-awareness, start at birth by responding positively to his cries. This will help him feel secure and safe. Babies need attention, patience, and lots of face-to-face time. In the toddler years, help him identify and name his emotions. When he’s showing signs of a tantrum, talk to him about feeling frustrated and encourage him to begin labeling how he feels. This will free him to understand and regulate his own emotions.

2. Self-Management

This is simply learning to control your own emotions and behavior. As your child learns to label her emotions, you can begin to teach her how to control them rather than letting her emotions control her. Toddlers need an example to follow; model for her how you control your own emotions and how you address them in healthy ways (taking a time-out, meditation, prayer, a deep breath, counting to 10). Also, pay attention to how you interact with other adults in the home. Constant tension between her caregivers creates a sense of insecurity which can lead to behavioral problems once she’s in school.

3. Social Awareness

Show empathy and understanding towards others. Help your toddler learn empathy by listening well to him and encouraging him to listen well to others. Encourage his curiosity and sociability by engaging in your community. Take him with you as you run errands and interact with others. Model for him appropriate ways to interact with people who are different from you. Knowing how to positively engage with others and understand their feelings will have lifelong benefits.

4. Relationship Skills

Successful relationships require the ability to handle conflicts responsibly. Again, you are the example your child will follow most closely. Teach her to respect people’s differences, resist comparing her to other children, and most importantly, apologize when you mess up.

5. Responsible Decision Making

Making positive choices about personal and social behavior will be key to your child’s success in life. Encourage a healthy sense of self-esteem by giving him responsibilities at home and allowing him to make age-appropriate choices on his own. Show him your appreciation when he helps around the house. He wants your attention. Praise him and encourage him positively as often as you can. Let your positive comments far outweigh your negative ones. It will do wonders for his self-esteem.

We at the Urban Child Institute feel that a child’s earliest experiences are especially important, because her brain is developing faster in the first three years than at any other time in her life. Helping your child develop socially and emotionally will actually help her succeed in school and reach her potential. Start early and reap a lifetime of benefits. (source, The Urban Child Institute)

26/06/2017

The Oxford Business Group says the Philippines is still the best-performing country in the region. It even claims the country is likely to be the next Asian tiger, beating other emerging markets like Vietnam and Myanmar.

It's Playtime, Mom!
26/06/2017

It's Playtime, Mom!

No idea how to keep your little one busy? Here are some ideas that are simple and yet a whole lot of fun....

Parenting Matters, Especially for “Difficult” Kids.Some temperamental types are more sensitive to positive and negative ...
26/06/2017

Parenting Matters, Especially for “Difficult” Kids.
Some temperamental types are more sensitive to positive and negative parenting.

We’ve been all over the map when it comes to the view of how much parenting style matters in the development of child behavioral problems and disorders. From older days when cold mothering was thought to be the cause of autism to newer genetic hypotheses of behavior that make parenting sound almost irrelevant, we seem mostly to be moving towards a more balanced view that appreciates the crucial role of parenting in the context of many other mutually interacting factors.

Adding to this perspective, a new study attempts to combine the data of 84 other research studies that have examined the degree to which a child’s temperament modifies (or doesn’t modify) the association between parenting style and levels of child behavioral problems, cognitive skills, and social ability. Parenting style was quite broadly divided into positive and negative, with negative parenting typified by more hostility and controlling behavior and positive parenting relating to more warmth and supervision.

The main finding was that children whose temperament is more “difficult” (they were easily upset, less able to self-regulate) both benefit more from positive parenting and suffer more from negative parenting. These effects were found for all of the domains examined, including behavioral problems, prosocial behavior, and cognitive/academic ability.

Interestingly, this study complements some new genetic findings that seem to indicate that certain genes that have been labelled as “risk” genes for things like depression and anxiety may be better conceptualized as genes that relate to a child’s sensitivity to his or her environment.

One reason why this study is so important is because it flies in the face of the conventional wisdom that children with more difficult temperaments have something “biological” going on that is not going to respond to “psychological” interventions like parenting and instead need things like medications. It argues instead that we should be redoubling our efforts to support and guide parents of these challenging kids because the task is not only more difficult but also, it seems, because these children are more responsive to parent behavior “for better or for worse.” It’s also important to state what this new study does NOT say, namely that child behavioral problems are the result of bad parenting. The study also is not an invitation for parents of easier kids to let them go on autopilot.

My home child psychiatry clinic has tried to embrace these ideas for years as part of a model called The Vermont Family Based Approach. Here, we try to focus on parenting not from the assumption that child behavior problems result from bad parenting but rather that mothers and fathers of temperamentally more challenging kids require super-parenting skills that for most us, myself included, do not come naturally. (source: Psychology Today, David Rettew M.D.)

26/06/2017

Income property can be a very lucrative investment. Huge tax write-offs and extra income in your pocket are some of the benefits of rental property.

25/06/2017

The Philippine economy posted a 6.4-percent growth in the first quarter of the year, the government announced Thursday.

Healthy Foodies for Babies.
21/07/2015

Healthy Foodies for Babies.

Get tips and serving ideas for healthy baby food. Try ten baby-friendly foods that are packed with nutrients, cheap, and easy to prepare.

18/07/2015

Hi mommies and daddies! How do you well know about your baby? Watch this interesting facts about babies.

*Video credit to BuzzFeed

There was a time, they were our heroes... (photo credit to the owner)
15/07/2015

There was a time, they were our heroes... (photo credit to the owner)

Lovely!
14/07/2015

Lovely!

These breathtaking breastfeeding images remind us all that mothers and babies are the most beautiful thing in the world.

Address

Quezon City

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Bright Future posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Bright Future:

Share