Book on Great Parenting: 'What Great Parents Do' Unlocks 75 Strategies to Improve Parenting Skills

Do you want to know how to raise children who will thrive in their future? A newly launched book can offer such help. Erica Reischer, a parent educator, author, speaker and clinical psychologist, reveals in her book "What Great Parents Do" offers 75 proven strategies on how to shape your children's positive behavior and raise loving, secure and happy children. It was launched August 16, 2016.

Everyone knows that parenting can be an arduous feat for many. It can be greatly exasperating and sometimes draining in trying really hard to know and do what is best in rearing children.

Dr. Erica Reischer understands what parents go through as she is a parent herself and a psychologist. She leads parenting workshops at UCSF Benioff/Children's Hospital, San Francisco Zen Center and University of California.

In Fox News, she said that when she became a parent, she really wanted to have one resource to have brief summaries that are very action-oriented so that parents could turn to it again and again in order to understand what they could do whenever such common, challenging situations are encountere.This was her inspiration in coming up with the book "What Great Parents Do".

According to a report in National Post, the strategies included in the book include: "Great parents do what they say they are going to do," "Great parents see that actions speak louder than words," and "Great parents are transparent about their decision-making process." Every strategy gets one chapter.

In the book, Reischer advises parents to work on emotion coaching. It is a method of helping kids manage, identify and understand their moods and feelings. According to Reischer, this is very difficult thing to do. 

There are so many interesting parenting strategies in the 250 pages of the book. The strategies are all easy and quick to follow, and very applicable in every day to day situation parents experieince in dealing with their kids .

"Please keep in mind that you can only act on what you know, and most parents have been doing the best they can with what they know so far," says Dr Erica Reischer. Take it from an expert.

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