Making bread provides opportunities to measure, question and observe.
How (and why) you should play a key role in your child's school success.
How to help your children stick with it (no matter what).
The right (and wrong) way to cheer on your third- through fifth-grader.
Help your fourth- or fifth-grader learn to express his emotions.
These fun games are perfect for those long car rides.
Give your third-, fourth-, or fifth-grader healthy detective work with this nutritious game.
Millions of children are already possessed by The Hunger Games trilogy, now the first movie is on its way. Has children’s media become too addictive - and too violent?
Go, Mom, go! Could a parent coach turn you into the parent you always hoped to be?
I am very confused because my son works differently at school than when he is at home. The work his teachers say he struggles with in school is work he breezes through at home without a problem. The problem is mainly in math. I went...