Episode 3 - Raising Resilience: The Power of Positive Parenting and Social-Emotional Development"
Description
Dr. Maria Jesus Ampuero is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist with a Ph.D. in Psychology. She currently has been providing Mental Health Services for the past 24 years and has been working at the Desert Mountain Children Center (DMCC) for almost 18 years as a Behavioral Health Counselor. She specializes in working with individuals across the lifespan, with a particular focus on trauma, neuro-developmental disorders, and family dynamics.
In this episode of Fostering Futures, we're joined by Maria Ampuero to discuss and explore how positive parenting lays the groundwork for social-emotional development--and why every connection counts in raising emotionally resilient children.
🔑 Highlights & Takeaways:
- Positive Parenting Defined
- Positive parenting is a nurturing and supportive approach that emphasizes communication, warmth, and non-harmful discipline.
- It fosters emotional well-being and health social behavior.
- Social Emotional Development
- Children need help understanding and managing emotions and building positive relationships
- Parent-Child Dynamics, Developmental Awareness and Modeling Consistency
- Understanding the differences between a child's developmental age and chronological age when setting expectations and responses.
- Recognize diverse caregiver roles-- biological, foster, adoptive, stepparent, or grandparent-- and how each may shape the parent-child relationship.
- Consistency in words and actions builds trust and helps children feel secure and guided.
- Cultural Perspectives on Parenting
- Physical punishment in some cultures; Maria shares her shift to consequence-based discipline.
- Validation and Emotional Regulation
- Validate children’s feelings instead of minimizing them.
- Example of a child’s small injury feeling like a big deal.
- Reinforcing Good Behavior (Positive Reinforcement)
- Praise and acknowledge effort to encourage desirable behavior.
- Avoid over-focusing on negatives (e.g., a single bad grade on a report card).
- Technology vs. Human Interaction
- Importance of psychoeducation about screen time and cognitive development in early years.
- Need for face-to-face interaction.
- Alternatives to Device Time
- Use structured activities like walking, painting, or showing pride in a child’s creativity.
- It’s the presence, not perfection, that matters.
- Discipline and Consequences in Positive Parenting
- Discipline = consistent consequences, not punishment or fear-based threats.
- Children must learn that actions have outcomes.
- Teaching Responsibility Through Language Shift
- Replace “Who’s guilty?” with “Who is responsible?”
- Helps avoid shame and teach accountability.
- Reframing Parental Growth & Support
- Self-awareness is key. Acknowledge learning and effort as progress.
- Support one another as co-parents instead of criticizing.
- Modeling Positive Relationships for Kids
- How spouses interact (e.g., appreciation vs. criticism) is a model for kids.
- Resources
- Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)
- Social Learning Theory (Albert Bandura)
- Positive Discipline (Jane Nelsen)
Whether you're a parent, educator
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