| By: Committee for Children Book Review: Just Kidding By Trudy Ludwig Reading Level: Grades 1–4 D.J. wants to be a good sport. As the new kid at school, he’s happy to be included by Vince and the other boys, but when Vince’s funny remarks start having an edge, D.J. is not laughing. He’s confused and hurt. As he says, his friends at his old school “would joke around with me, but they never made me feel like I was a…Read More
| By: Committee for Children Work Together to Prevent Bullying March 22, 2010 SEATTLE—Bullying isn’t just harmless playground behavior. It’s something many children witness each and every day, and it can have long-lasting, serious consequences. An astounding eight out of ten boys and girls in middle and high schools across the United States report being bullied, points out Committee for Children, a King County-based nonprofit organization that…Read More
| By: Committee for Children Replacing Punishment with Positive Reinforcement I recently learned of the Babemba tribe of southern Africa, who have an amazing way of dealing with misbehavior.Read More
| By: Committee for Children The Roots of My Advocacy, Part 3 As research validated our programs, word about Committee for Children spread.Read More
| By: Committee for Children Teach Your Child Well Elementary school students may not be thinking too much about a career path. Even middle and high school students often feel they have plenty of time to contemplate a grown-up future of work, family, and community. But the adults who teach them, counsel them, coach them, and make their breakfast in the morning are well aware of how quickly time passes. Today that nine-year-old may be wrestling a word problem in math class. Tomorrow, she’ll be all dressed up for an interview…Read More
| By: Committee for Children Book Review: Trouble Talk by Trudy Ludwig Reading Level: Grades 1–4 New student Bailey bursts onto the scene at Hoover Elementary. She’s fun and lively, and at first Maya enjoys her friendship with her. But after a while, Maya becomes uncomfortable with Bailey’s insensitive ways. At a slumber party, Bailey prefaces an insult to another friend with “No offense, but…” Later, she embarrasses…Read More
| By: Committee for Children Not Your Father’s Brain Research Thirty-three years ago, about all that was known about the brain was its basic anatomy, but I still found it intriguing to learn about this amazingly complex organ.Read More
| By: Allison Schumacher Stranger Danger: A Parent’s Perspective Like most parents, my mind runs away like a frightened animal at the idea of my child being sexually abused.Read More
| By: Committee for Children Build, Seek, Learn: A Student’s Connection to School My first teaching assignment was at a small school in a very poor neighborhood of London where the boys played soccer incessantly out on the paved yard with the high wire fence and the girls hung around the edges talking and watching the boys.Read More
| By: Committee for Children The Roots of My Advocacy, Part 2 In the mid-1980s, while remaining deeply committed to the Talking About Touching program, Committee for Children began looking into other areas of prevention.Read More