Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Confidence is the result of COMPETENCE.
Confidence does not come from telling your child he/she is great, wonderful, etc. When your child learns to do things or works hard at something, he/she will have confidence.
I agree. Confidence comes from a sense of mastery. Working through something and overcoming it, seeing success related to your efforts. Also kids who have an accurate and not inflated sense of their strengths and abilities tend to have more lasting self-confidence. So if your child says, "I'm not good at x", rather than replying "oh yes you are", have a discussion about what good would look like and step to take to get there. No stepping in to save the day, let them work through life with your support.
Anonymous wrote:All of this is good advice. Plz read NUTURE SHOCK- it is an excellent book on how kids build their own confidence instead of this fake inflated "tropies for everyone attitude" we are surrounded by. Continue to praise effort and hard work- giving your child a false sense of "innate" intelligence or athletic ability only sets them up for failure.
Anonymous wrote:Confidence is the result of COMPETENCE.
Confidence does not come from telling your child he/she is great, wonderful, etc. When your child learns to do things or works hard at something, he/she will have confidence.
Anonymous wrote:Confidence is the result of COMPETENCE.
Confidence does not come from telling your child he/she is great, wonderful, etc. When your child learns to do things or works hard at something, he/she will have confidence.