Soy más fuerte que la ira: Libro ilustrado acerca del manejo de la ira y cómo lidiar con las emociones de los niños (El mundo de las emociones y ... (Spanish Edition)
¿Estás cansado de decirle a tu hijo que no grite ni patee cosas cuando está enojado? ¡Entonces estos libros en español para niños son la solución que estabas buscando!
El enfado es una emoción básica que sentimos todos. Sin embargo, cuando se pierde el control, el enojo se vuelve destructivo. ¿Cómo ayudar a los más pequeños a gestionar esta emoción?
Cuando los niños están enojados, suelen manifestar su enojo a través de un mal comportamiento. Pueden gritar, llorar, tirar cosas, hacer berrinches, rabietas y rodar por el suelo; o todas las anteriores combinadas. Es por eso que la mayoría de los padres necesitan una guía que les ayude a controlar las emociones y sentimientos de sus hijos.
Este libro de cuentos para niños trata sobre la historia del pequeño Nick:
Contiene hermosas ilustraciones y una historia con rima. Ayuda a los niños a reconocer y lidiar con su enojo de una manera divertida a través de la comunicación con los animales del zoológico. Ofrece una variedad de técnicas calmantes especiales para el manejo de emociones. Tiene como objetivo mejorar las habilidades de autorregulación y promover los valores para niños. Enseña a los niños a admitir sus errores y a decir "lo siento”. Incluye una página adicional para colorear. Incluso si lo ha intentado todo, este libro de niños es perfecto para obtener una comprensión más profunda del manejo de la ira de los niños y cómo ayudarlos a controlar sus emociones. Se lo recomendamos a padres y / o tutores.
Este libro preescolar también trata el tema de la ansiedad infantil y puede resultar interesante y útil para los más pequeños, así como para los niños mayores de edad escolar.
Ayude a su hijo a desarrollar la inteligencia emocional desde una edad temprana. Al agregar ahora este libro en español para niños a su carrito, no solo ayudará a su hijo al manejo de emociones en esta etapa, sino a lo largo de su vida.
★★★ Este libro de cuentos es una edición en español del bestseller de Amazon: “I Am Stronger Than Anger”.
The message was behaviourist in nature. Instead of understanding normal child development and emotional regulation it simply paints emotions as "good" versus "bad". There's no coregulation from the parent. The parent refers to the child as "good" only once the child stopped expressing anger.
Anger is a normal human feeling, neither inherently good nor inherently bad. A child must be taught how to handle and express anger in a healthy way, not that it is bad to feel anger.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The best thing about this book is that it offers a few strategies for coping with anger, and that it displays for kids that one strategy might not be enough to completely eliminate any anger they feel. However, the original premise is strange - a child is at a zoo having a tantrum because he can't take a live koala home with him. Although some toddlers may tantrum about irrational things like this, toddlers don't have the mental ability to reason through why they can't have it like the child in this story, so the developmental capability of the kid is not believable. The text is also clunky and hard to read - it doesn't flow well.
So beautifully explained how to calm down and diffuse your anger. It also explained the rights of animals. My boys age 7 & 5 loves it. Great illustrations too.
I chose to read this book after receiving a free e-copy. All opinions in this review are my own and completely unbiased.
In this delightful story, Nick is told he can’t get a koala, and he gets angry. He learns how to deal with anger from the animals at the zoo. What a fun way to learn for both Nick and any children reading this book!
The story is told in rhymes and the illustrations are cute and colorful. I especially like the adorable animals. It’s bound to keep the attention of children plus they learn different ways to cope with anger. It also teaches them to own their behavior and apologize.
The only issue I have is that << >> are used for quotes most of the time instead of ” “. Occasionally, a quote with ” ” is thrown in making it more confusing. If not for that, I’d give this book 5 stars.
This book is for helping young children manage their anger. Nick is at the zoo with his mother and is mad because he cannot have that real live baby koala to take home! The zoo animals are very helpful giving him hints on what to do with his angry feelings. Things like breathing deeply and counting to 10 monkey helps him to do. Kangaroo encourages him to exercise in a variety of ways! I like the fanciful feel with the animals helping Nick to manage his angry feelings.
The illustrations are colorful and captivate the reader’s interest. They fit the story nicely as Nick goes through the zoo meeting different animals to help him control his anger. Enjoy this book with your little ones!
I was really disappointed by this book and surprised by the high ratings. I purchased it to have conversations with my 6 and 3 year old about anger and emotional regulation, however, I felt like it missed the mark. For one, the rhyming structure made it long and awkward to read aloud, and it didn’t allow space to pause and talk about feelings, which is something I really value in books about emotions.
Second, I felt like the whole storyline was a missed opportunity. The book involves a child throwing a tantrum because he wants to take a koala home from the zoo and through movement and breathing he calms down. Why not use the zoo animals to model healthy ways of expressing anger to keep it playful and fun? And then oddly, the child is expected to apologize at the end, but for what exactly? For imagining he could take a koala home? That’s not misbehavior, it’s curiosity. I think this was a missed teaching opportunity for both parents and kids. Why couldn’t the parent engage with the kids curiosity in the moment? “Oh, you want to take the koala home? Wouldn’t that be fun! What would we feed it? Where would it sleep?” That kind of playful connection could have gently guided the child back to reality while validating their feelings and imagination. Overall, it reads like something generated to capitalize on the trending topic of emotional regulation without offering any real emotional depth, and the reviews feel suspiciously inflated...
In this story, Nick struggles with challenging emotions. He often feels angry and he has a hard time controlling his hard feelings. This book was written for children ages 3-6 years old. The book displays Nick learning to control his anger through different ways such as deep breaths, exercising and being apologetic. He went through different ways to try to cope with being angry and learned that he may be wrong in some situations but it’s always possible to fix it. I chose this book because it is extremely important for children to learn how to deal with feelings of anger or being upset when they are young so that as they get older they do not struggle with it. Dealing with hard feelings at a young age can be challenging, having this book in my future classroom will allow my students the opportunity to be exposed to healthy ways to tend to their emotions. This story displays accountability, respect and integrity. Nick experiences hard feelings but he also turns his mistakes into positives and he learns healthy ways to go about things. This theme encourages students to know that it is okay to make mistakes but it is important to correct them and learn from them.
I wanted to like this book! It had all the makings of exactly what we’re looking for. It started off strong and helpful but the end wraps it all up by saying “don’t ruin someone else’s day with your anger” and it just tanked the whole thing. I’m not into telling my young kid that they are responsible for my mood or anyone else’s. That is not responsibly teaching emotional intelligence. Really missed a simple opportunity to say “don’t let your anger ruin your own day”. I’ll be returning this book today.
As a preschool teacher, I know that children have big, overwhelming feelings sometimes. This book is an excellent, beautifully illustrated book that gives suggestions on how to deal with the feeling of anger kids experience. It is told in a gentle rhyming way. I would highly recommend this book and will be investing in the paperback version to read to my preschool class.
This book is great to show kids strategies to calm themselves down when angry. I work in a school library, and I think it is going to make a wonderful addition to our teachers' resources. I gave it a 4 instead of a 5 because some of the sentences were so long it was hard to read in a rhyming cadence, which was distracting to me. (This is a rhyming book.) However, I would still purchase it for its content.
I liked that this was focused more on boys and showing them how to regulate their emotions in different ways and express themselves instead of what previous generations have been taught. It was nice that the mother made him feel better in the end and reminded him was loved, not sure about giving him a toy at the end, maybe it's positive conditioning for calming himself down, maybe it's still rewarding the meltdown to a degree.
We read this after a meltdown. My 5 year old felt better after reading it and wanted me to save it for the next meltdown. It helps as a parent having a resource such as this because sometimes we can forget these tools as well. Great reminder for all.
I don’t like sending the message that we shouldn’t be angry because it impacts other people. It is more about how anger prevents us from finding the connection we need. I don’t want my kids thinking they can’t show anger because it bothers other people.
Soo good it was a good story and I learned how to be calm too! Even when I want something but I can’t get it I get angry and sad but calm down when I feel to overwhelmed I count to 10 and drink some cold water with a Icey them watch something or play with my pet
It’s a nicely illustrated book and I appreciate the coping strategies it covers. And while the story is somewhat odd, the hardest thing was how it reads. It doesn’t flow smoothly, with lots of words tripping over themselves. Once the parrot comes into the picture it’s not clear who’s providing the advice to whom. Having said that it’s still cute and useful.
The rhyming helps keep the kiddos engaged and they're able to absorb the helpful tools! I read this to my students and they enjoyed the illustrations as well as the rhyming.
Illustrations are wonderfully detailed. The basic bones of the story and the advice given are solid. Would have enjoyed it much more without the rhyming text. Not every children’s story needs to rhyme, or should.
My daughter Faith sat down with me throughout the whole book she was very engaged and seem to enjoy this book we will continue to read from this author until further notice
The intention of this book is great but the solutions to end the anger are not the best in my opinion. Who will convince a small kid to practice pranayama while being angry ? And do exercise enthusiastically to end the sadness ? Not sure this will be realistic.
This is a story about how to cope with angry emotions and some calming techniques for the child. This will be useful in my future classroom because there will be many times when there will be angry times. The methods could be used to better the classroom setting.
This book does a solid job breaking down big feelings for younger kids. It’s not super deep, but it makes talking about anger way easier without getting preachy. Good one to have around if you're working with little kids.
An amazing book to read to students when they are struggling with angry emotions. Can have the book on hand and have students read it individually when they are struggling with their emotions or can read it to the whole class at the beginning of the year or just as a refresher.
This was a very cute book that discussed handling emotions. While it's targeted towards younger kids, I think a wide range of elementary aged kids could find this very helpful. I loved that it had a positive spin on handling anger than you typically see.
I have read the book to my child who has anger issues. He is discovering his way of showing anger but breathing and squats really helped him. Lovely book