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Helping Children Make Friends

Making friends is an important part of growing up and is a lifelong gift. What can we parents do to help our children discover the value of having friends? Or assist a child who is struggling to make friends? Here are suggestions from Geri Stern who is head instructor with Fun Time, a Parks and Recreation Program, and has also successfully raised four children.

Friends In The Early Years

Friends In The Elementary School Years

Dealing With Low Self-Esteem

A child may come home from school or play group saying, "No one likes me. No one will play with me." Again, get the child to talk through the situation. Ask for concrete examples. Be supportive, acknowledge feelings and help the child move through feelings to change behavior that can correct the situation. Your child may have personality conflicts with another child. Explain that in life we all can't have everyone liking us all the time. What can you do to help the child who truly has few or no friends? This child may be suffering from a low self-esteem. Give your child help to discover the lifelong value of friendships.

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Pam Wynne Fellers is a local free-lance writer and mother. This informaton originally ran in the Parent to Parent column she writes for The Coloradoan, a daily Fort Collins, CO newspaper.
Parent To Parent: Back To School Blues / EpiTwo@aol.com