👨‍👩‍👧 Empowered Parenting for Stronger Families
Course overview
Lesson Overview

2.44 – Teaching Emotional Vocabulary at Every Age: Emotional vocabulary grows like language—it starts simple and expands with experience. Teaching words like “frustrated,” “embarrassed,” or “hopeful” gives children tools for self-expression. The richer their emotional language, the better they can manage feelings and relationships. Parents can teach this through books, storytelling, or daily reflection. When children can label emotions, they gain control over behavior. Over time, emotional vocabulary becomes the foundation for empathy and resilience. It replaces confusion with clarity and anger with understanding. Talking about feelings by name builds communication that’s thoughtful, not reactive. Every new emotion identified is one less acted out. Naming emotions makes them manageable and meaningful.

About this course

A practical guide to building stronger family relationships through effective parenting strategies, positive communication, and supportive discipline.

This course includes:
  • Practical parenting strategies and discipline frameworks
  • Communication exercises to improve parent-child relationships
  • Real-world scenarios for practicing conflict resolution and problem-solving

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