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When Kids Lie: What the Research Actually Says About Why and What to Do
Lying is one of the behaviors parents react to most strongly and, as it turns out, one of the most misunderstood in terms of what it signals developmentally. The instinct is to treat lying as a moral failure requiring correction. The research suggests it is primarily a cognitive and social milestone — and that how…
The Research on Bedtime Routines: What Actually Works
Sleep is one of the highest-leverage health behaviors for children, and the bedtime routine is the primary parental mechanism for supporting it. The research on what makes routines effective is more specific than the general advice most parents receive — which amounts to “be consistent.” Consistency matters, but the content, timing, and structure of the…
The Research on Homework: Does It Actually Help?
Homework is one of the most contested topics in education research — and one where the popular narrative (“homework helps kids learn”) diverges significantly from what the data actually shows. The honest answer is more nuanced and more age-dependent than most parents or teachers acknowledge. What the Research Actually Shows The foundational review of homework…
When Kids Lie: What the Research Actually Says About Why and What to Do
Lying is one of the behaviors parents react to most strongly and, as it turns out, one of the most misunderstood in terms of what it signals developmentally. The instinct is to treat lying as a moral failure requiring correction. The research suggests it is primarily a cognitive and social milestone — and that how…
The Research on Bedtime Routines: What Actually Works
Site: groverfamily.orgCategory: ParentingSchedule: 2026-06-13 08:00 MDT — Sleep is one of the highest-leverage health behaviors for children, and the bedtime routine is the primary parental mechanism for supporting it. The research on what makes routines effective is more specific than the general advice most parents receive — which amounts to “be consistent.” Consistency matters, but…
Raising Kids Who Can Handle Failure
The instinct to protect children from failure is understandable. Watching a child struggle, lose, or fall short is genuinely uncomfortable. The problem is that children who are protected from failure consistently enough do not develop the capacity to recover from it — and the protection never lasts, because life does not cooperate. The research on…