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Community Guidelines
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Be Happy
Don’t we all want to be happy? curaJOY is all about joy, and long-lasting happiness, and we are a non-profit formed to build and support children’s inner strengths—emotional fitness—in fun yet effective ways so they experience and fulfill their maximum potential. To make sure curaJOY’s community is a happy, safe and supportive place, we have a few simple guidelines that all participants should follow. If you see any violations of our community policy, please contact us right away.
No hidden agendas – curaJOY is about emotional wellness and personal growth. It’s a positive and uplifting community. There’s enough chaos, fighting, and other stressors in the world. Please leave your political, religious, or other non-related agendas when you’re here. Posts intending to sell, spam, and mislead will be removed.
You won’t find curaJOY serving any advertisement to you from Google, Amazon, or any other sources in our community. We don’t sell or trade your personal information either.
Be Safe – curaJOY makes every effort to moderate its online community but asks members to still employ the best online safety practices. Don’t share identifying personal details! (i.e phone numbers, emails, address, birthday, etc.)
Common Sense Media is another non-profit educational organization with an online safety course you can review with your parent here.
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If Yes or No Questions Backfire, Give Choices Instead
“Can you start your homework?” (alternatively, “Have you finished your homework/ Homework.”) “No.” “Do you want to clean your room now?” “Nah.” “Wanna go to work and attend to all of your responsibilities today?” “Uh… no.” Offering choices to our children instead of asking yes/no questions can transform how they respond to you. Choices foster…
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State of ABA Industry
The behavioral healthcare industry is in trouble. For kids and families, the dire shortage of providers and difficulty obtaining services means long wait times for necessary evaluations for speech, behavior, occupational, and other therapies, prescriptions for services, and their services to begin. They may get through the entire process and not qualify for treatment. Many…
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Yes, When
If your child struggles when you tell them “no”, try saying “yes, when” instead. For example, your kid might ask for junk food or more time on Minecraft. Instead of saying “no,” which triggers immediate negative behavior and a stressful power struggle, tell them when they can fulfill their request. “Yes, you can have more…
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