Empowering Children for Success
Each of us are born with an ‘energy construct’ as unique as our fingerprints and faces…this energy construct is what attracts us towards certain aspects of life and away from others.
The nature/nurture controversy is resolved:
both are equally important!
By uncovering the unique ‘energy construct’ of the child and understanding what the child is passionately interested in, parents and teachers can wrap the core curriculum learning experiences around that passion, and learning becomes as easy as ‘A,B,C and 1,2,3.’
To Order the Book:
For individuals with credit card payment click here to order: http://www.bookch.com/parent.htm#25505
Book stores call BCH Fulfillment & Distribution
at 800-431-1579.
For an autographed copy of the book send check
for $19.95 made out to Zender Publishing at:
10965 Cleveland Avenue,
Kansas City, KS, 66109
please include your name and address.
About the author:
Raymond T. Coppola is available for talks and seminars and can be reached
by email, coppolagp@aol.com, or by phone at 561-445-2116. See his profile on the ‘about us’ page of his website.
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Quotes from the book
"The discovery that children brought up in the same family are no more similar than they would be if they had been brought up on different planets shows how poorly we understand the development of personality."
» Steven Pinker, How the Mind Works
"The finding that each child has an individual pattern or primary reactivity, identifiable in early infancy and persistent through later periods in life, must be considered by everyone with responsibility for effective socialization of the child."
» Dr’s Thomes, Chess, Birch, Hertzig, Korn, Behavioral Individuality in Early Childhood
"Each of us is autonomous in that we specify and direct ourselves in different patterns, or ways of being, during our lives."
» Fritjof Capra, The Web of Life
"Each newborn varies in an infinite number of ways from another. Many parents will remark, after holding their second, third, sixth or eighth child for the first ime, ‘how can he be so different from the rest!"
» Dr. Brazelton, Infants & Mothers: Differences in Development
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