Parent and Caregiver Resources
January 2022
In this Issue
For Parents of All Ages of Children
For Parents of Younger Kids
For Parents of School-Age Kids
For Parents of Teens
Teaching Kids About Money
For Parents of All Ages of Children
Becoming an Ally to the Gender-Expansive Child: A Guide for Parents and Carers
by Anna Bianchi

Encourages readers to redefine their understanding of gender
to understand and support their child, offering a step-by-step
guide to becoming an ally.
21st Century Parenting: A Guide to Raising Emotionally Resilient Children in an
Unstable World

by Rick Capaldi

A family therapist offers modern parents a school-tested method to
help their children develop emotional stability and attain success by
his version of “the 3 Rs”: reading their child’s environment, regulating their emotional temperature, and redirecting their behavior.
Weird Parenting Wins: Bathtub Dining, Family Screams, and Other Hacks from
the Parenting Trenches

by Hillary Frank

Unconventional - yet effective - parenting strategies, carefully
curated. Some of the best parenting advice that Hillary Frank
ever received did not come from parenting experts, but from
friends and podcast listeners who acted on a whim, often in
moments of desperation. These "weird parenting wins" were
born of moments when the expert advice wasn't working, and
instead of freaking out, these parents had a stroke of genius.
Every parent and kid is unique, and as we get to know our kids,
we can figure out what makes them tick. Because this is an
ongoing process, Weird Parenting Wins covers children of all
ages, ranging in topics from "The Art of Getting Your Kid to Act
Like a Person" (on hygiene, potty training, and manners) to "The
Art of Getting Your Kid to Tell You Things" (because eventually, they're going to be tight-lipped). You may find that someone else's weird parenting win works for you, or you might be inspired to try something new the next time you're stuck in a parenting rut.
Building Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings
by Kenneth R. Ginsburg

Provides parents with tactics for helping children handle stress, build confidence, increase control and independence, and develop other skills essential for healthy and productive adulthoods.
Raising White Kids: Bringing Up Children
in a Racially Unjust America

by Jennifer Harvey

Good parents, hard conversations. From color-blindness to race-conscious parenting - where do you start? 
The ABCs of Diversity: Helping Kids (and Ourselves!) Embrace Our Differences
by Carolyn B. Helsel

How do we raise the next generation to respect and learn from people who look or believe differently than they do? From two educators who are also moms comes a guide to help parents and other teachers navigate conversations about all kinds of diversity. This practical resource includes activities to build compassion and empathy among differing religions, classes, races, genders,
abilities, political affiliations, sexual orientations, nationalities, and more.
The Addiction Inoculation: Raising Healthy Kids in a Culture of Dependence
by Jessica Lahey

A comprehensive reference for parents and educators explains
the origins of substance abuse while offering advice for how to identify risk factors and take steps to prevent vulnerable teens
from developing an addiction disorder.
The Reflective Parent: How to Do Less and Relate More with Your Kids
by Regina Pally

Psychiatrist Pally offers the reader tips and advice for how to be a more mindful, reflective parent. The crux of the text is that there is
no one right way to parent; the successful parent/child relationship
is one built on listening and slowing down. Of special note are the chapters focusing on the brain and its hard-wired functions such as the capacity for empathy and connection and how the parent can successfully harness these powers. The material covers children from infancy to young adulthood.
Being at Your Best When Your Kids Are
at Their Worst: Practical Compassion in Parenting

by Kim John Payne

A practical, meditative approach that can be used in the moment to help you stay calm and balanced when your child's behavior is pushing you to your limit - by the popular author of Simplicity Parenting.

In difficult and challenging situations with our kids, every parent wants to react as much as possible in a way that reflects our
family values and expectations. And yet when our children "push
our buttons," we often find ourselves reacting in ways that we
know are far from our principles, and even seem to further inflame
a situation. How can we move from a "stress regress" to speaking
in a voice that is warm, calm, and firm?

Payne offers techniques that simply, but very directly, shift these damaging patterns of communication and parental behavior. It is
a grounded and practical tool that he has taught to numerous
parents worldwide to slow down the interaction, give them a
greater feeling of inner spaciousness, be more in control of their reactions and the situation, sense what their child's deeper needs
are even though they are misbehaving, and respond in a way that gives the child a feeling of being heard yet puts a boundary in
place. 
Mindful Discipline: A Loving Approach to Setting Limits & Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child
by Shauna L. Shapiro

A clinical psychologist and internationally recognized expert in mindfulness provides parents with the five elements of mindful discipline, including unconditional love, mentorship, and admitting mistakes to help raise respectful, responsible children with high emotional intelligence and good self-esteem. 
The Power of Showing Up: How Parental Presence Shapes Who Our Kids Become
and How Their Brains Get Wired

by Daniel J. Siegel

Draws on the latest understandings in attachment research to
explain the importance of a parent’s involved presence in helping children feel safe, secure, and loved. 
The Yes Brain: How to Cultivate Courage, Curiosity, and Resilience in Your Child
by Daniel J. Siegel

The authors counsel caregivers and educators on how to help children reach their full potential by cultivating mental receptivity, sharing scripts, ideas, and activities for transitioning resistant
children away from reactive states and into mindsets that are
more curious, creative, and resilient.
The Strength Switch: How the New Science of Strength-Based Parenting Can Help Your Child and Your Teen to Flourish
by Lea Waters

Explains how making small shifts in one's parenting style can
yield big results by uncovering a child’s strengths, rather than focusing on his or her weaknesses.
The 3 Ms of Fearless Digital Parenting: Proven Tools to Help You Raise Smart and Savvy Online Kids
by Carrie Rogers-Whitehead

How can we protect our kids online-and teach them to protect themselves?

This book unpacks the "
3 Ms" of parenting in the digital age, a
proven approach used with thousands 
of parents through the
work 
of Digital Respons-Ability and its founder, Carrie Rogers-Whitehead. When Carrie first started working in the field of digital citizenship, she found significant gaps in how digital parenting was taught. Not only were parents not informed enough around technology, they also didn't understand child developmental stages. Parents' expectations for their children were unrealistic because they didn't know how online responsibility changes at different ages, as children's brains change.

From this realization, 
Carrie developed the 3 Ms - three approaches to digital parenting - based on specific age ranges: Model
(ages 0-8), Manage (ages 8-13), and Monitor (ages 13-18).
By teaching parents how to change their approach to 
digital responsibility based on the developmental stage of their child, she has seen significant success in fostering happier and healthier relationships between parents and kids, as well as safer tech use by kids at all ages. 
Raising Kids Who Read: What Parents and Teachers Can Do
by Daniel T. Willingham

Suggests that using the principles of decoding, comprehension,
and motivation provide the necessary support for a child to learn
to enjoy reading in a tech-driven world.
For Parents of Younger Kids
Eat, Sleep, Poop: A Common Sense Guide
to Your Baby's First Year - Essential Information from an Award-Winning Pediatrician and New Dad

by Scott W. Cohen

Counsels new parents, enabling confident, anxiety-free parenting
at every stage of a baby's first year, in a chronologically arranged reference that addresses common questions, myths and present-day controversies, from cord-blood banking to plastic bottles. 
How to Talk So Little Kids Will Listen: A Survival Guide to Life With Children Ages
2-7

by Joanna Faber

Provides parents of children between the ages of 2 and 7 with
tools, tips, and strategies to more successfully and more meaningfully connect and communicate with their kids, with a
chapter that addresses the specific needs of children on the
autism spectrum.
Baby 411: Clear Answers & Smart Advice
for Your Baby's First Year

by Denise Fields

Provides information for parents on the health, sleep habits,
and nutrition of babies in their first year.
Heading Home with Your Newborn: From Birth to Reality
by Laura A. Jana

Advice on caring for a newborn baby during the first eight weeks,
and strategies for handling situations such as illness, crying, and traveling away from home.

This new edition also includes new information on breastfeeding
and the involvement of allergies, formula options, vitamins and supplements, sleep, extended stay in strapped-in positions, swaddling, diaper options, the impact of social-media sharing,
and capturing moments/sharing memories.
The Toddler Brain: Nurture the Skills Today That Will Shape Your Child's Tomorrow -
The Surprising Science Behind Your
Child's Development from Birth to Age 5

by Laura A. Jana

A pediatrician and early-childhood-development expert — drawing
on studies and stories from pediatrics, neuroscience, social science and childcare — as well as the world of business and innovation, shows parents how to equip their child with seven key 21st-century skills that will help them succeed. 
The Happiest Baby on the Block: The New Way to Calm Crying and Help Your Newborn Baby Sleep Longer
by Harvey Karp

Harvey Karp, M.D., shares his groundbreaking approach to calming your new baby's crying and transforming your infant into the happiest baby on the block! His method is based on four concepts:
 
1. Create the fourth trimester: How to re-create the womb-like atmosphere your newborn baby still yearns for.
 
2. Find the calming reflex, an "off switch" all babies have, which quickly soothes fussing and crying.
 
3. Use the 5 S's, five easy methods to turn on your baby's amazing calming reflex.
 
4. Apply the cuddle cure: how to combine the 5 S's to calm even colicky babies.
Sleeping Through the Night: How Infants, Toddlers, and Their Parents Can Get a Good Night's Sleep
by Jodi A. Mindell

Complemented by a listing of resources, this handbook for parents deals with the sleep problems of small children, offers detailed guidelines on how to train an infant to sleep through the night, and gives helpful advice on coping with night wakings, sleep apnea, ADHD, changes in routine, nightmares, travel, and more.
Cribsheet: A Data-Driven Guide to Better, More Relaxed Parenting, from Birth to Preschool
by Emily Oster

Award-winning economist Emily Oster spotted a need in the pregnancy market for advice that gave women the information they needed to make the best decision for their own pregnancies. By digging into the data, Oster found that much of the conventional pregnancy wisdom was wrong. In Cribsheet, she now tackles an even greater challenge: decision making in the early years of parenting. As any new parent knows, there is an abundance of
often-conflicting advice hurled at you from doctors, family, friends, and the internet. From the earliest days, parents get the message that they must make certain choices around feeding, sleep, and schedule or all will be lost. There's a rule - or three - for everything. But the benefits of these choices can be overstated, and the
tradeoffs can be profound. How do you make your own best decision?

Oster debunks myths around breastfeeding, sleep training, potty training, language acquisition, and many other topics. She also shows parents how to think through freighted questions like if and how to go back to work, how to think about toddler discipline, and how to have a relationship and parent at the same time.

Economics is the science of decision-making, and Cribsheet is a thinking parent's guide to the chaos and frequent misinformation
of the early years. Oster is a trained expert - and mom of two - who can empower us to make better, less fraught decisions - and
stay sane in the years before preschool.
The No-Cry Sleep Solution: Gentle Ways to Help Your Baby Sleep Through the Night
by Elizabeth Pantley

Nearly all babies fight sleep. Some people argue that parents
should let their baby "cry it out" until the child falls asleep; others
say parents should tough it out from dusk until dawn. Neither tactic fosters happiness in the family. The No-Cry Sleep Solution gives parents a third option: a proven method to pin-point the root of
sleep problems and solve them in a way that is gentle to babies, effective for parents, and provides peace in the home.

One of today's leading experts on children's sleep, Pantley delivers clear, step-by-step ideas for guiding your child to a good night's
sleep without any crying. This 
parenting classic shows how to decipher - and work with - your baby's biological sleep rhythms, create a customized plan for getting your child to sleep through the night, nap well during the day, and teach your baby to fall asleep peacefully, and stay asleep, without all-night breastfeeding, bottle-feeding, or requiring a parent's care all through the night.

This updated edition provides important new guidelines on safety, and an expanded chapter specifically about newborns. It covers every sleep issue that occurs in the first few years and answers parents' common questions about white noise, back-sleeping, SIDS, day care, naps, nightwaking, bedsharing, dealing with strong-willed babies, working with caregivers, troubleshooting sleep issues, and more!
Tantrums! Managing Meltdowns in Public and Private
by Thomas W. Phelan

A straightforward approach to managing tantrums, with simple, easy-to-follow directions on how to best manage the problem and guide kids appropriately. 
Stop Second-Guessing Yourself -The Toddler Years: A Field-Tested Guide to Confident Parenting
by Jen Singer

The author provides advice and encouragement for the care of toddlers, covering such topics as sleep, potty training, entertainment, and feeding.
Preschool Clues: Raising Smart, Inspired, and Engaged Kids in a Screen-Filled World
by Angela C. Santomero

The award-winning creator of children's television shows, including Blue’s Clues and Super Why!, explains the philosophies behind her hit programs and offers help to parents in teaching their children critical thinking skills, fostering empathy and nurturing their self-worth.
Check out our 'Brary Bags!
'Brary bags are themed bundles that include books, toys, games, and tips and tools
for parents that help foster a love of reading and prepare your little one for Kindergarten. Each bag implements 1 of the 5 core concepts of early literacy -
singing, writing, talking, playing, and reading. 
 


For Parents of School-Age Kids
Rethinking School: How to Take Charge of Your Child's Education
by S. Wise Bauer

Bauer turns conventional wisdom on its head: when a serious problem arises at school, the fault is more likely to lie with the
school, or the educational system itself, than with the child. Bauer teaches parents how to flex the K–12 system, rather than the child. She closely analyzes the traditional school structure, gives
trenchant criticisms of its weaknesses, and offers a wealth of
advice for parents of children whose difficulties may stem from struggling with learning differences, maturity differences, toxic classroom environments, and even from giftedness.

Bauer's advice is comprehensive and anecdotal, including material drawn from experience with her own four children and more than twenty years of educational consulting and university teaching. Rethinking School is a guide to one aspect of parenting: negotiating the twelve-grade school system in a way that nurtures and protects your child’s mind, emotions, and spirit.
Reset Your Child's Brain: A Four-Week Plan to End Meltdowns, Raise Grades, and Boost Social Skills by Reversing the Effects of Electronic Screen-Time
by Victoria L. Dunckley

A psychiatrist who works with children offers an integrative, holistic improvement program that calls for a reduction in electronic overstimulation from video games, laptops, cell phones, and tablets for youngsters who have been diagnosed with ADHD, bipolar, or autism spectrum disorders. 
The Formula: Unlocking the Secrets to Raising Highly Successful Children
by Ronald F. Ferguson

Based on hundreds of interviews with successful people, a
Harvard economist and an award-winning journalist describe a formula for helping children from all types of backgrounds become successful adults, by doing things that any parent can do.
Parent Alert! How to Keep Your Kids Safe Online
by Will Geddes

Educates parents and helps them better protect their children and
set ground rules to keep them safe from internet dangers, including cyberbullying, extortion, phishing, grooming, cyberstalking, sexting, and other online crimes.
When the World Feels Like a Scary Place: Essential Conversations for Anxious
Parents & Worried Kids

by Abigail H. Gewirtz

Necessary and urgent, this resource, written by an expert child psychologist, brings solutions to raising engaged and confident
kids in spite of the bad things happening in our world today. 
Why Will No One Play with Me? The Play Better Plan to Help Children of All Ages
Make Friends and Thrive

by Caroline Maguire

An in-demand parenting expert presents her revolutionary new
program called “The Play Better Plan” that will help parents coach children to connect with others and make friends.
Viral Parenting: A Guide to Setting Boundaries, Building Trust, and Raising Responsible Kids in an Online World
by Mindy McKnight

A guide to raising responsible, safe, and communicative kids in
the digital world. From cell phone contracts, rules for earning an allowance, and creating a family mantra, this book teaches readers
to solve problems before they happen.
The Homeschooling Option: How to Decide When It's Right for Your Family
by Lisa Rivero

In a candid, objective study of homeschooling, the author assists parents in determining when or if homeschooling should be an alternative to public schools, examining the ways in which it can help youngsters with special learning needs and addressing important questions about curriculum, socialization, resources, and more.
Parenting Bright Kids Who Struggle in School: A Strength-Based Approach to Helping Your Child Thrive and Succeed
by Dewey Rosetti

Parenting Bright Kids Who Struggle in School guides parents
through the challenging and often unfamiliar landscape of raising
kids who have been labeled with learning differences, including dyslexia, ADHD, autism, sensory processing disorder, and more.
This book builds upon Harvard professor Todd Rose's groundbreaking research in the "Science of Individuality," in which
an individual's unique profile of strengths and weaknesses is leveraged in order to help him or her live a fulfilling, successful life. By understanding their child's jagged profile, the context of learning, and multiple pathways, parents will learn revolutionary techniques
to encourage their child's strengths and mitigate weaknesses. 
Parents will also discover how to manage the emotional fallout of raising a child who does not conform to the "average" model of learning so prevalent in the modern school system. Drawing from
her own experience as a parent of a child with learning differences - who is now a highly successful adult - the author outlines clear lessons from a quarter century of advocating for kids who learn differently.
Raising Boy Readers
by Michael Sullivan

Provides practical approaches to promote reading to boys, addressing physical differences, such as the different rates of early brain development between boys and girls; psychological issues, such as the outward focus of boys; and social issues, such as stress and confidence. It also looks at the effects of modern schooling and how these can be counterbalanced or supplemented at home. More than 300 boy-friendly books by age group are recommended, and commentary is provided for selected titles. 
The Read-Aloud Handbook
by Jim Trelease

The seventh edition of the acclaimed literacy handbook explains the importance of reading aloud to children, offers guidance on how to set up a read-aloud atmosphere in the home or classroom, and lists hundreds of children's titles that are great for reading aloud.
Browse our Maker Kits!
 
Draw with a 3D pen, code a robot mouse, or create electrical circuits! Our Children's
Maker Kits are designed to encourage your child's imagination through STEM-based learning.
 


For Parents of Teens
Ending the Parent-Teen Control Battle: Resolve the Power Struggle & Build Trust, Responsibility & Respect
by Neil D. Brown

Provides parents of teenagers with advice on ending the cycle of conflict and restoring peace in the home, identifying the three
drivers behind the battle for control and how to end it.
Grown and Flown: How to Support Your Teen, Stay Close As a Family, and Raise Independent Adults
by Lisa Heffernan

The co-founders of the “Grown and Flown” site present an
accessible guide to parenting during the high-school years that counsels parents on how to build strong, healthy relationships
with their teen children while preparing them for independent adulthood.
The Teenage Brain: A Neuroscientist's Survival Guide to Raising Adolescents and Young Adults
by Frances E. Jensen

An pediatric neurologist demystifies the teen brain by dispelling widespread myths and providing practical advice for negotiating
this difficult and dynamic life stage for both adults and teens.
Parenting Through Puberty: Mood Swings, Acne, and Growing Pains
by Suanne Kowal-Connelly

Puberty is tough — on kids and maybe even more so on parents! Parenting Through Puberty explains the physical and emotional changes families can expect to see in their child. Dr. Kowal-Connelly covers the nitty-gritty of children's changing bodies, and, critically, addresses the emotional toll puberty can take, covering issues of moodiness, body image, and self-esteem. Also included are ways
to encourage adolescents to embrace a healthy, active lifestyle in these crucial years, with tips on exercise and nutrition.
52 Ways to Connect with Your Smartphone Obsessed Kid: How to Engage with Kids
Who Can't Seem to Pry Their Eyes from
Their Devices

by Jonathan R. McKee

Offers over fifty tips and ideas for parents looking to connect with their children who are more invested in smartphones and social media, including such options as "no-tech Tuesday," binge watching television as a family, and getting a manicure together.
The Angst of Adolescence: How to Parent Your Teen (And Live to Laugh About It)
by Sara Villanueva

Being a good parent is one of the most difficult, yet most rewarding, jobs a person can have in his or her lifetime. Being the parent of a teen is an especially daunting phase of the journey. As parents
begin to notice the significant changes that come with adolescence, they wonder just what happened to their happy, sweet, and affectionate young boy or girl. Parents sit by amazed - and often
lost and unprepared - as they witness their child morph and mutate into a full-blown pubescent display of emotions.

Written in a conversational, informative, humorous, and relatable style, this book promises to deliver as a trustworthy resource for parents of teens who are searching for answers and guidance
about how to maneuver their way through this tricky developmental period.

Dr. Sara Villanueva, a prominent psychologist specializing in the adolescent years, shares relevant research findings so that parents can be informed of the facts as opposed to making assumptions based on ubiquitous but questionable sources. Most of all, it will provide parents of teenagers with prospective in the midst of angst
so they can come away with the sense that they are not alone in
their experience of raising teens. Most of what your teen is feeling and expressing is normal and falls within the expected range of behavior for adolescent development. Despite the challenges involved in parenting teens, we should take time to focus on the positive things in life and live with our child through the tough adolescent years so that we emerge on the other side with
friendship and a deeper bond. 
Teaching Kids About Money
Raising Money Smart Kids: What They
Need to Know About Money - And How to
Tell Them

by Janet Bodnar

Offers practical and down-to-earth advice for parents trying to teach
a sense of the value of money to their children.
The MoneySmart Family System: Teaching Financial Independence to Children of
Every Age

by Steve Economides

The system will show you how to teach your children to manage money and have a good attitude while they're learning to earn, budget, and spend wisely.
Beyond Piggy Banks and Lemonade
Stands: How to Teach Young Kids About Finance (And They're Never Too Young)

by Liz Frazier

Beyond Piggy Banks is a light-hearted, simple guide for parents
to teach young 
children the fundamentals of finance. By
incorporating it into their everyday life and using activities, games, quizzes, and other fun and interactive tools, your child will build the strong financial foundation needed to make smart decisions as they grow.
Clark Smart Parents, Clark Smart Kids: Teaching Kids of Every Age the Value of Money
by Clark Howard

The popular author and radio host turns his money-saving expertise to the financial problems of kids, from allowances to buying a first
car, creating a perfect guide for parents of children of all ages. 
Raising Financially Confident Kids
by Mary Hunt

This book gives parents a creative plan for teaching their children how to manage money wisely, including teaching them about debt, eliminating an attitude of entitlement, and being honest about the consequences of easy spending.
Rich Dad's Rich Kid, Smart Kid: Give Your Child a Financial Head Start
by Robert T. Kiyosaki

A step-by-step handbook for parents explains how to teach children the fundamental principles of finance, introducing a variety of financial problem-solving skills that help youngsters understand the importance of financial planning in their lives. 
Make Your Kid a Money Genius (Even If You're Not): A Parents' Guide for Kids 3 to
23

by Beth Kobliner

The New York Times best-selling author of Get a Financial Life counsels parents on how to teach their children about smart money management, sharing jargon-free advice on subjects ranging from delayed gratification and living within one's means, to getting a solid education and using credit cards responsibly.
The Opposite of Spoiled: Raising Kids Who Are Grounded, Generous, and Smart About Money
by Ron Lieber

A New York Times personal-finance columnist challenges popular taboos to explain how talking openly to children about money can help parents raise grounded, financially responsible young adults. 
Money Minded Families: How to Raise Financially Well Children
by Stephanie W. Mackara

Money is always a concern, regardless of background or standing
in society. Every adult and child needs to become "financially well," able to align their personal values with their finances so they may save, spend, and share, and invest their money with purpose, and
for a sound financial future. The book teaches holistic guidance for families to learn to live their best financial lives - instead of just getting by - financial mindfulness, values-oriented spending, healthy financial socialization, and key financial concepts.


Members of today's young adult generation often find themselves saddled with debt and unprepared to manage their day-to-day finances. The topic of financial independence has a strong following among millennials, and many are just learning in their late 20s and 30s how to get ahead financially. As they raise families, they seek guidance to raise financially well children. The next generation needs to be better prepared to live financially well lives.
The First National Bank of Dad: The Best Way to Teach Kids About Money
by David Owen

This book shows parents how to teach their children about financial responsibility by providing a system that will encourage children to become savers, cautious spenders, charitable donors, and logical investors.
The 5 Money Conversations to Have with Your Kids at Every Age and Stage
by Scott Palmer

To teach a child about money, you must first know his or her Money Personality. Is your child a Spender, Saver, Risk Taker, or even a Flyer? Understanding how to navigate these different personalities will assist you in teaching your child to be financially aware.
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