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Kids Who Laugh: How to Develop Your Child's Sense of Humor

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While some children are born with an innate sense of humor, for most kids, humor is a learned behavior. Kids Who Laugh is the first book to examine the psychology of humor in children and explore the many benefits that this characteristic has to offer, including self-confidence, coping skills, creativity, self-control, and more. Most important, it offers the actual tools that parents can use to give their child the gift of laughter.

192 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 2001

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Selmoore Codfish.
Author 15 books3 followers
May 31, 2013
Short book. Most of the material is about how to engage your children in age appriate humor.
There is a short chapter on the theory of humor. Also, the book has a three-fold strategy for engaging (your) children. 1) model the behavior, 2) reward all humor attempts, 3) (more encouragement).
The theories seem very simplistic.
I like to take a wholist view of childhood development. This book jumps right in and assumes that your children are ready for it.
Profile Image for Laurie.
58 reviews4 followers
January 9, 2012
Eh. This book is pretty dated, and there is not as much attention on kids under 1 year old as I had anticipated. It's an OK kindle book buy because it's only $1.99, but it's not nearly as inspiring as I wanted it to be. The author writes the chapters like individual essay papers, with intros and conclusions. Not really my style I guess.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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