Your Parenting Mojo - Respectful, research-based parenting ideas to help kids thrive
En podcast av Jen Lumanlan
286 Avsnitt
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246: My Parenting Feels Off Track: Reparenting Helps You Find Your Way Back
Publicerades: 2025-05-26 -
RE-RELEASE: Finding Your Parenting Village: How Community Support Changes Everything at Home
Publicerades: 2025-05-19 -
245: Does praise help or hurt your child? What research actually shows
Publicerades: 2025-05-12 -
RE-RELEASE: How to get your child to listen to you
Publicerades: 2025-05-05 -
244: Gentle parenting doesn’t have to mean permissive parenting
Publicerades: 2025-04-28 -
243: Parent Conflict Over Discipline: How to Get on the Same Page
Publicerades: 2025-04-21 -
242: The secret to having feedback conversations your family will actually hear
Publicerades: 2025-04-14 -
241: Validating children’s feelings: Why it’s important, and how to do it with Dr. Caroline Fleck
Publicerades: 2025-03-24 -
240: How to prepare your kids for the real world
Publicerades: 2025-03-17 -
239: First year for your newborn baby: The 7 ideas that really matter
Publicerades: 2025-03-10 -
238: Feeling exhausted and overwhelmed? Tools to help you cope
Publicerades: 2025-02-17 -
237: 8 reasons your child won’t tell you what’s wrong – and how to help
Publicerades: 2025-02-10 -
236: How to heal the anger in your relationship with your spouse
Publicerades: 2025-02-03 -
235: Children’s threats: What they mean and how to respond
Publicerades: 2025-01-27 -
234: The problem with Time Outs: Why they fail, and what to do Instead
Publicerades: 2025-01-20 -
233: Time Outs: Helpful or harmful? Here’s what the research says
Publicerades: 2025-01-13 -
232: 10 game-changing parenting hacks – straight from master dog trainers
Publicerades: 2025-01-06 -
231: How to support baby’s development after a Wonder Week
Publicerades: 2024-12-16 -
230: Do all babies have Wonder Weeks? Here’s what the research says
Publicerades: 2024-12-02 -
229: Raising kids in divisive times: Where do we go after the 2024 election?
Publicerades: 2024-11-12
Parenting is hard…but does it have to be this hard? Wouldn’t it be better if your kids would stop pressing your buttons quite as often, and if there was a little more of you to go around (with maybe even some left over for yourself)? On the Your Parenting Mojo podcast, Jen Lumanlan M.S., M.Ed explores academic research on parenting and child development. But she doesn’t just tell you the results of the latest study - she interviews researchers at the top of their fields, and puts current information in the context of the decades of work that have come before it. An average episode reviews ~30 peer-reviewed sources, and analyzes how the research fits into our culture and values - she does all the work, so you don’t have to! Jen is the author of Parenting Beyond Power: How to Use Connection & Collaboration to Transform Your Family - and the World (Sasquatch/Penguin Random House). The podcast draws on the ideas from the book to give you practical, realistic strategies to get beyond today’s whack-a-mole of issues. Your Parenting Mojo also offers workshops and memberships to give you more support in implementing the ideas you hear on the show. The single idea that underlies all of the episodes is that our behavior is our best attempt to meet our needs. Your Parenting Mojo will help you to see through the confusing messages your child’s behavior is sending so you can parent with confidence: You’ll go from: “I don’t want to yell at you!” to “I’ve got a plan.” New episodes are released every other week - there's content for parents who have a baby on the way through kids of middle school age. Start listening now by exploring the rich library of episodes on meltdowns, sibling conflicts, parental burnout, screen time, eating vegetables, communication with your child - and your partner… and much much more!