Three things every parent should do to keep their child safe
These child safety tips are what experts use to prevent sexual abuse and help children understand consent.
Technology for kids: How to set the rules
When it comes to technology for kids, the conclusion always seems to be: Less if more. But is it really all that bad?
Cyberbullying: Help for your child
Bullying today is no longer confined to the school grounds. Here are 7 ways to provide our kids with cyberbullying help.
What to do if your child has seen porn
Young people innately want to know more about love and sex, yet porn has the ability to destroy everything that is good about romance, love and relationships.
Is this what second children are like?
Ever wondered why your second child behaves the way they do? Science has an answer.
🎥 Simple ways to spend one-on-one time with kids
Spending one-on-one time with your children is essential to all areas of their development, regardless of whether they are a newborn, toddler or teenager.
🎥 Teenagers and sex: 3 things you need to know
Sexologist Patricia Weerakoon, discusses three imperative things you need to know about teenagers and sex.
Business ideas for kids: Building your child’s entrepreneurial skills
Sixty-five per cent of children entering primary school in 2021 will end up working in a job that currently does not exist, and something is missing in their education.
Day trips from Sydney with kids: Hunter Valley Gardens
Exhausted Sydney’s beaches, museums and playgrounds for the kids? Two hours’ drive away, the Hunter Valley Gardens is a great day trip experience for the little ones.
Is your child’s after school care doing more harm than good?
New Australian guidelines for kids in Outside School Hours Care (OSHC) have the potential to affect many children on a regular basis.
Smacking children: The only time you should do it
Physical punishments to correct our children’s behaviour can sometimes be seen as child abuse. You’d be surprised why there’s still a case for smacking.
5 things our tween girls really want from us
I asked 500 10-year-old girls what they want from us—their parents. This is a snapshot.