Parenting: Frequently Asked Questions
Is this 'attachment parenting'?
The NNN does advocate attachment parenting and many of our values are derived from the belief that encouraging contact and responding to our child's needs in early life is the way to raise confident, secure children. However, the Network continues to support parents throughout their child's life and also emphasises community and nurturing ourselves, so it embraces broader elements as well.
Source: www.naturalnurturing.org.uk
Is this a parenting course?
Partially, but it has a significant difference. Ka-Ching! believes that you, the parent, can add tremendous value to your child's education. We also believe that you should add this value and, particularly, that you should begin as early as possible.
Source: www.ka-chingworld.com
What is a Parenting Order?
This requires the parent or parents of a young person (aged 10 to 17 years) convicted of an offence to attend advice and guidance sessions for up to three months, and/or to ensure the young person maintains certain behaviour standards for up to 12 months. The Parenting Order is also available to the court if the parents are prosecuted for not ensuring school attendance, or if a young person is made the subject of an Anti Social Behaviour Order.
Source: www.ealing.gov.uk
How is parenting time determined?
Parenting time, or visitation, may be determined based upon the historic involvement of the parent, as well as the parents' future availability. Parenting time may be extremely limited, and in some cases, supervised, or as broad as to allow for an equal division of time between the parents.
Source: www.ronaldsaperpc.com
What is shared parenting?
Shared Parenting is a concept that involves custody arrangements that require the parties to agree to a shared parenting plan, which would provide for the sharing of responsibility regarding the raising of the parties' children. The central theme is that parents of children should come together in the best interest of their children and develop a joint parenting plan involving the various aspects of their children's lives. ...
Source: www.divorcebc.com
Shared parenting is a term used to describe an arrangement where an alternate family is recruited and trained to provide a home part-time to help a birth family in caring for their child with disabilities. The amount of time and conditions under which care is shared between two families can vary with families' circumstances and preferences. The birth family and the alternate family negotiate an agreement outlining the arrangements and describing their mutual decisions about how to share care.
Source: www.everychildtexas.org
Shared parenting (formerly called joint custody) provides that the parents share parental rights and responsibilities regarding the children. Specifically, the parents mutually decide issues regarding the children's education, religious upbringing, medical needs, activities and other issues. A shared parenting plan will provide each parent's exact rights and responsibilities. Shared parenting does not mean parents have to exercise equal parenting time with the children. ...
Source: www.klcampbellfamilylaw.com
Shared parenting is the newest concept in post-divorce parenting. When shared parenting is adopted, the participants enter into a written agreement that defines a parenting relationship based on equal participation of both parents in the ongoing upbringing of their children. Parents agree to work together to implement a plan that is in the best interests of their children and agree to attempt to amicably resolve disputes that arise.
Source: www.blwnj.com
Shared Parenting is the preferred method of allocation of parental rights (custody). A shared parenting plan wherein all issues of raising the children are set forth in a detailed plan. The key to shared parenting is the ability of the parents to communicate for the best interests of their children and to encourage the children to have a loving and caring relationship with the other parent.
Source: www.randallowry.com
What is Parenting Arizona?
We are a statewide non-profit organization who's aim is strengthening the family and the prevention of child abuse and neglect.
Source: www.parentingaz.org
What is parenting time/visitation?
What was once referred to as “visitation” is now called “parenting time” pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 518.003, subd. 5. Parenting time is defined as the time a parent spends with a child. Courts are required to grant time and rights to the noncustodial parent as a way to maintain a relationship between the parent and child. SPOUSAL MAINTENANCE (SUPPORT) IN MN
Source: thelawway.com
What is Dominion Parenting Media?
Dominion Parenting Media (DPM) is a division of Dominion Enterprises Inc. DPM publishes eight award-winning regional parenting magazines in markets ranging from Boston to Los Angeles. These free publications are distributed where parents live, work and play – through local libraries, private schools, preschools, hospitals, doctors’ offices, museums and specialty retailers. DPM’s monthly print circulation is nearly 1 million, with an audited nationwide readership of about 2 million. ...
Source: www.parenthood.com
What is a Parenting Agreement?
This agreement can spell out the rights and responsibilities of each parent and require their enforcement through private mediation.
Source: www.rainbowlaw.com
Why is Parenting For Everyone different?
The book Parenting For Everyone is different because it describes classical parenting, which has a different approach to the relationship between parents and children. Most conventional parenting books suggest a "correcting" approach to parenting, which assumes that parents are to watch, control and correct their children's behavior. The classical approach to parenting has an inspiring attitude, which considers parental goals as to awake, challenge, and enlighten their children's spirit. ...
Source: www.parentingforeveryone.com
WHAT IS VISITATION (PARENTING TIME)?
In Arizona, visitation is referred to as parenting time. If you and your spouse can come to an agreement as to the details of your parenting time plan (the schedule of days and times that each will have the children), the court will usually approve the plan.
Source: www.lasiterlaw.com
What is the parenting education program?
A six hour class offered by different social service organizations throughout Connecticut. The program is designed to help divorcing parents help their children by covering: the developmental stages of children; adjustment of children to parental separation; dispute resolution and conflict management; guidelines for visitation, stress reduction in children and cooperative parenting.
Source: www.lcappalli-familylaw.com
What is parenting support?
Parenting support is provided on a one to one basis. A trained parenting professional gives information and assistance to parents on the needs of their child or children. Parenting support also includes education and supervision. North Essex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust offers a range of support, depending on individual family circumstances.
Source: www.nepft.nhs.uk
What is a parenting programme?
Parenting programmes are organised groups of parents who meet regularly over a set period of time. The group is facilitated by professionals trained in parenting skills. Parenting programmes teach parents to recognise the common behaviours children exhibit. Parents learn how to encourage good behaviours and how to manage undesirable traits. The groups help many parents to discover that parenting can be fun as well as challenging.
Source: www.nepft.nhs.uk
What is a Shared Parenting Agreement?
This document will set out each partner's rights and responsibilities towards any children you may have, even though both parents may not be "legal" parenst of the child.
Source: www.kanderlaw.com
What are the goals of Parenting Coordination?
The goals of Parenting Coordination include: a) providing an alternative method for parents to communicate about child-focused issues via a third-party professional b) taking children out of the middle of parental conflict c) fostering the development of creative problem solving to maintain the involvement of both parents in the children’s lives
Source: www.solutionsnottalk.com
What are the benefits of a parenting plan?
When parents come to an agreement on a detailed parenting plan that reflects the overall best interest of their child they will often enjoy a more stable, predictable, and consistent schedule by reducing the amount of misunderstandings, conflicts, and legal costs often associated with litigation and the courts. ...
Source: www.woodhavencounseling.com
What is a parenting plan?
When parents separate there may be considerable advantage in formally agreeing how they will deal with the children. A parenting plan is a document which sets out the main issues in detail. Typically a parenting plan would include a contact schedule, the agreed positions in respect of contentious issues (i.e. health & safety, education and religion etc.), and specify how the plan would be updated.
Source: www.woodhavencounseling.com
In order to encourage parents to think about the issues involving their children as early in the divorce process as possible, the law now requires that each party file a "Parenting Plan". At the time of the filing of their first pleading, initially, each party proposes how he or she feels that major issues should be handled. ...
Source: www.cutreralaw.com
In order to encourage parents to think about the issues involving their children as early in the divorce process as possible, the law now requires that each party file a "Parenting Plan". At the time of the filing of their first pleading, initially, each party proposes how he or she feels that major issues should be handled. ...
Source: www.stldivorce.com
What is foster parenting?
Foster parenting provides a safe, loving, and nurturing temporary home for children in foster care. As foster parent, you will become a member of a team that is working to assure the well being of the child. The team consists of the child, the child's family, the agency caseworker, the foster family, and the Family Court.
Source: www.jaxboyshome.org
Who is eligible for parenting leaves?
The Collective Agreement recognises a wide array of parenting arrangements. You're eligible if you or your partner: give birth to a child, or adopt a child, or come into care, custody, and control of a child under 12.
Source: www.yufa.org
What is “co-parenting”?
“Co-parenting” is short for “cooperative parenting.” The term co-parenting describes an approach to parenting that acknowledges the decision parents have made to no longer live together. It recognizes the special relationship between former spouses or partners share with respect to their children. Co-parenting respects the boundaries that former partners need in order to heal and move on with their lives, but it also recognizes that, for the children’s sake, bridges need to be created between the two homes.
Who receives parenting time?
The parent who does not have physical custody will have scheduled parenting time with the children except in unusual situations.
Source: www.stahancyk.com
Is mindful parenting a method for parenting?
No. The practice of mindful parenting is not intended to be a parenting tool. It is an approach to mindful living intended that focuses on the parent, not the child. Through mindful parenting, one may well develop a broader perspective that influences how one parents by bringing greater awareness and understanding into the process.
Source: themindfulparent.org
What is the difference between parenting kids and parenting teens?
There are aspects of coaching that are the same when we coach parents of young kids and when we coach parents of teenagers. However, there are sections of the coaching that are different. The “Be Happy in LIFE Relationship Model” has a special section for parenting teens that is very valuable to parents and feedback show that understanding the model is provides great relief for parents of teens. The rules and boundaries are different for young kids than the rules required for teens. ...
Source: www.behappyinlife.com

