
Siblings without rivalry
Adele Faber, Elaine Mazlish, Elaine Marsh
1987
The authors show effective ways to reduce sibling rivalry and promote cooperation rather than competition
Both "Siblings without rivalry" by Adele Faber, Elaine Mazlish, Elaine Marsh and "Your child at play" by Marilyn M. Segal are popular choices for readers interested in Brothers and sisters and Child rearing. This comparison helps you decide which to read first — or whether both belong on your list.

Adele Faber, Elaine Mazlish, Elaine Marsh
1987
The authors show effective ways to reduce sibling rivalry and promote cooperation rather than competition

Marilyn M. Segal
1985
Packed with learning activities, games, poems, and recipes, as well as anecdotes and advice, the eight sections focus on: Individual Differences and Common Threads (distinguishing between real and pretend; concern with fairness; self-awareness) The Questions Children Ask (the physical world; the natural world; the social world) Friends (best friends; controversies and conflicts; sibling play) Active Play (contact and cuddling; physical feats; sports) Creative Play (music; art; crafts; storytelling and jokes) Pretend Play (actor play and dressing up; imaginary playmates; reemergence of pretending) School Play (reading; writing; arithmetic; collecting facts; science) Family (attachment and separation; family continuity; traditions)
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