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

7.60 – Building Emotional Vocabulary With Young Children: Emotional vocabulary gives children the power to describe, not just react. Start with simple words like happy, sad, and mad, then expand to frustrated, nervous, or proud. Using picture cards or stories makes learning engaging. Label emotions during daily life: “You look disappointed that playtime ended.” Repetition helps link feelings with experiences. Parents can make games out of naming faces or acting emotions out. As language grows, emotional outbursts decrease because communication replaces confusion. The more words they have, the more control they gain. Emotional vocabulary builds empathy by helping children recognize others’ states too. Teaching this language turns feelings into something understandable, not frightening.

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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