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September 9th, 2007 at 6:09 pm

Separating Useful Parenting Advice from the Not-So-Useful

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Parents are constantly being bombarded with the latest advice about parenting and they receive tips from experts or other parents. This is because giving parenting advice is easy since everyone has some sort of experience on the subject. There are new parent tips, survival guides and dos and don’ts lists that are being given to parents every single day- whether they ask for it or not!

Abundance of Information Needs to Be Sifted Out

With the abundance of information available, it can be quite perplexing when it comes to sifting out what works and what does not. How are parents to know which advice to follow, and when to rely on plain old common sense? Do experts who offer parenting advice really know what it is like to be a parent in a real home?

Parents may need to try RPM3 which is a no-frills approach to parenting that has been developed over thirty years by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development or the NICHD. They have spoken to experts, parents as well as children and collected statistics, identified myths as well as tested suggestions to come with the RPM3.

For parenting advice, using RPM3 guidelines will help to separate useful information from the less useful pieces of information and advice to enable parents make their own parenting decisions, and these guidelines are not based on stories about people’s thinking about parenting, but incorporates thirty years of NICHD research to let parents know what really works.

The RPM3 Method

RPM3 stands for Responding, Preventing, Monitoring, Mentoring, and Modeling. It teaches parents to respond to the child in an appropriate manner and advises them to prevent risky behavior or problems and nip them in the bud, if possible. It also advocates monitoring the child’s contact with his or her surrounding world, and mentor the child to support as well as encourage desired behaviors as also model the parent’s own behavior to give to the child a consistent, positive example that he or she can relate to and emulate.

Nevertheless, there is still plenty of information available that provides age-appropriate parenting advice and which helps parents take care of their children. Some of the frequently mentioned topics include nutrition, safety, common problems and what to expect at the pediatrician.

Moms and Dads often need parenting advice that will help them deal with common problems such as sibling rivalry, potty training, getting the child to sleep at night as well as managing behavior problems and temper tantrums. There are many qualified experts out there that deal with such topics and who will be best suited to get parenting advice from for all manner of child rearing issues. Using the RPM3 guidelines and the different parenting advice available should help parents sift the useful from the not-so-useful advice to become sensible and loving parents.


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