Raising Children in a High Achievement Culture: How Effective Co-Parenting Can Help Prevent a Child From Becoming a Disintegrated Student

Raising Children in a High Achievement Culture: How Effective Co-Parenting Can Help Prevent a Child From Becoming a Disintegrated Student

33 Minuten

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vor 4 Jahren

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Join us as we sit down with Student and Parent Coach, Dr.
Jeannine Jannot, to discuss how a high achieving culture can
result in a disintegrated student, and how co-parents can work
together to find a healthy balance for their child. In this
episode, Jeannine and Steve cover the following:



 •  Today’s high achievement culture, how it impacts
our kids and families, and how divorce fits into this
culture.
 •  Introducing the idea of a disintegrating student –
bright, capable kids who hit a rigor tipping point, begin to
struggle, and may eventually fall apart.
 •  Practical strategies that divorced co-parents can
use to support their kids who are stressed out and overloaded
with academics, sports, and activities
 •  How you define “success” in your family after a
divorce and how to get everyone on the same page.
 •  How the intense pressure kids are under in school
can impact the quality of their relationships with parents.
 •  What parents can do to minimize some of the
negative consequences of the achievement culture (burnout,
conflict, and anxiety).
 •  Some common pitfalls parents fall into that may be
counterproductive, and how co-parents can deal with their own
high levels of stress and burn out. 


If you would like to speak with one of our family law attorneys,
please call our office at (503) 227-0200, or visit our website at
https://www.landerholmlaw.com.


For more of Dr. Jannot’s parenting tips and to learn more about
her coaching and book, The Disintegrating Student: Struggling But
Smart, Falling Apart, & How to Turn It Around, visit
jeanninejannot.com, or visit her Facebook page Jeannine
Jannot


Disclaimer: Nothing in this communication is intended to provide
legal advice nor does it constitute a client-attorney
relationship, therefore you should not interpret the contents as
such.

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