August was a great reading month! Here‘s hoping for an equally awesome September!
August was a great reading month! Here‘s hoping for an equally awesome September!
My background is early intervention so I have always been reading books so I could help parents. When you have a kid that is very different and with a long list of diagnoses you seek out as much information as you can (at least I do, my husband reads scientific papers as his way to cope and understand). I loved a lot of her ideas and a differing perspective. It‘s nice to have a bit of hope when you feel so overwhelmed on this path.
An insightful book about parenting and coaching neurodivergent kids. A must read for parents or those in teaching profession.
Rating: 5⭐
For my full review please visit https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2961896399
Today‘s #AnglophileApril prompt is an interesting one. The first thing I thought of for #boysdontcry is anything about autism and boys being different. My autistic 11-year-old has no problems crying or showing his feelings, and I adore it. I think we need more emotion in this world, especially in the boys we‘re raising. This is a fascinating book on neuro-diverse kids and the issues they face.
This book is for anyone with a neurodiverse child. None of the information is new, but the second half of the book is laid out in a self-help style format, to help parents be their best for their kids. What I liked about the book is that it advocated helping atypical kids (no matter if that means dyslexic, ASD, ADHD, gifted or twice exceptional, etc.) to be their best selves, not try to change them. What often irks me about these books (below)