16 Things Kids Can Do empowers kids to work on fixing areas of conflict with their parents through common sense peer-based information coupled with industry experts. Each book in the series tackles a different subject such as Health & Wellness, Education, Finance and Nutrition and uses the testimony of 32 Experts in each industry to reinforce the positive messages. Health Experts include Pediatricians, Orthodontists, Dentists, Family and General Practitioners. Education Experts include Principals, Educators, Businessmen and women, Motivation and Time Management Experts. Financial Experts include Financial Management Counselors, Economists, Bankers, MBAs, CPAs, Businessmen and women. Nutritional Experts include Nutritionists, Doctors, Dieticians.
New York, New York (Vocus) September 15, 2009 -- Ask most parents to describe their teenage children and you’ll get a string of adjectives like "unresponsive, moody, uncommunicative, lazy, spoiled, sloppy, slobby, selfish, and sensitive." And these traits can apply to the ones that are getting "A’s" on their Report Cards as well as those that aren’t the Steven Hawkins of the classroom.
Turn the tables and ask teenagers to describe their parent’s attitudes toward them, and — when they’re done rolling their eyes — you’re most likely to get a more colorful array of verbiage: "Controlling, demanding, unreasonable, hard-to-please, and strict." Well, those were just the examples our editors allowed us to print.
And that’s how it’s been for ages upon ages. But now help is on the horizon with a new series of books entitled "16 Things Kids Can Do" that deliver "Self-Help Guides to Better
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