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For building empathy

7 do’s and don’ts
Does your child cry when you cry? Does she want to give a dollar to every homeless man with a cardboard sign? Or do you have the kid who noticed neither the tears nor the homeless person? The first child may have a deep natural capacity for empathy. The second child, not so much. Empathy is at the root of what it means to be human, experts say, and it’s at the core of all good relationships — personal and professional. Some children may naturally have more of it than others. But empathy — the ability to understand and share the feelings of another — is something that experts say can be enhanced, learned, and practiced.

Related articles from the June 2020 issue

Engaging conversations
Teaching respect
Meal time is valuable time

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