Parents can help their kids be open-minded, mindful of their strengths and weaknesses, and considerate of others.
Instead of retaliating, our kids can learn to find peace by making the choice to forgive.
Parents can encourage their kids to practice kindness and caring toward themselves and others.
Three science-based tips to nurture truthfulness in your child.
Here are some tips to make giving part of children’s everyday lives.
Greater Good Science Center's Christine Carter gives parents tips for fostering kids' friendships and strong social connections.
Loving bonds between parents and kids can help kids grow into compassionate adults.
This 2-minute video offers some ways to have conversations with kids about being grateful.
Kids persevere more when they imagine themselves as one of their favorite hard-working or heroic characters.
Published by the Greater Good Science Center at UC BerkeleyLearn why the process of kids' learning is more powerful than their achievements. Part of a discussion series between Christine Carter and Kelly Corrigan.
How to embrace children's failures so that they learn to rise to challenges. Part of a discussion series between Christine Carter and Kelly Corrigan.
Why fostering a growth mindset can give your children the drive to succeed. Part of a discussion series between Christine Carter and Kelly Corrigan.
This rhyming book will help young children identify what it feels like to be sad and what they can do to respond to it. It offers suggestions such as talking about what makes you feel sad, imagining happy things, or crying as a way to let the emotion out.
Join author, Holly Brochmann as she reads the book, letting kids know that it’s perfectly normal to feel sad — but offers a gentle reminder that the feelings won’t last for forever.
Do you ever worry about what other people think of you? Camilla Cream worried A LOT about what people thought of her and her body reacted to her thoughts in the strangest way!
Kiko grows and cultivates her garden, harvesting and sharing the fruits and veggies with her friends, neighbors, and family. This delightful tale serves as a metaphor of nurturing relationships and community, while sharing kindness with others.
A Feel Better Book for Little Worriers assures kids that having some worries is normal — everyone has them, even adults! The rhyming narration helps kids to identify a worry and where it might come from, as well as provides them with helpful tools to reduce and cope with worries.
This gently told and tenderly illustrated story is for children who have witnessed any kind of violent or traumatic episode,
Making friends can be tough, but this rhyming picture book will help navigate difficulties of shyness and social anxiety.
Sadie feels like her thoughts are soaring into the clouds and she can’t bring them back down to earth. She has trouble paying attention, which makes keeping track of schoolwork, friends, chores, and everything else really tough. Sometimes she can only focus on her mistakes. When Sadie talks to her parents about her wandering, dreaming mind, they offer a clever plan to help remind Sadie how amazing she is.