Michele Borba
Author of UnSelfie: Why Empathetic Kids Succeed in Our All-About-Me World
About the Author
Michele Borba, Ed.D., is an internationally renowned educational psychologist and an expert in parenting, bullying, and character development who appears regularly on Today, and has been featured as an expert on Dateline, The View, Dr. Phil, NBC Nightly News, Fox Friends, Dr. Oz, and The Early Show.
Works by Michele Borba
Building Moral Intelligence: The Seven Essential Virtues that Teach Kids to Do the Right Thing (2001) 118 copies, 3 reviews
Parents Do Make a Difference: How to Raise Kids with Solid Character, Strong Minds, and Caring Hearts (1999) 67 copies
Nobody Likes Me, Everybody Hates Me: The Top 25 Friendship Problems and How to Solve Them (2005) 53 copies
Don't Give Me That Attitude!: 24 Rude, Selfish, Insensitive Things Kids Do and How to Stop Them (2004) 45 copies
The Big Book of Parenting Solutions: 101 Answers to Your Everyday Challenges and Wildest Worries (2009) 37 copies
Esteem Builders: A K-8 Self Esteem Curriculum for Improving Student Achievement, Behavior and School Climate, Second Edition (1989) 24 copies, 1 review
Bookends: Activities, Centers, Contracts, and Ideas Galore to Enhance Children's Literature (1982) 6 copies
The 6Rs of Bullying Prevention: Best Proven Practices to Combat Cruelty and Build Respect (2016) 4 copies, 1 review
Printing readiness: First steps to printing for the preschooler (Partners in education : parent and teacher) (1977) 1 copy
Home Esteem Builders: Activities Designed to Strengthen the Partnership Between the Home and School (1994) 1 copy
Associated Works
Kid Confidence: Help Your Child Make Friends, Build Resilience, and Develop Real Self-Esteem (2019) — Foreword, some editions — 21 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Borba, Michele
- Gender
- female
Members
Reviews
Our culture in general is becoming more self-centered. Kids are taught that hard work will lead to success and happiness. This author argues that those ideas are leading to selfishness, not happiness. Instead of praising our kids so much for their intellect and talents, we should be praising them each time they put the needs of others before their own. There lies the secret to happiness. My only disappointment with the book is that it's really for parents of younger kids. You need to start show more teaching empathy early because once you realize you've raised a narcissist it's pretty darn hard to reverse. Tips and ideas in the book are best suited for younger families. A follow-up book directed specifically at getting teens off their phones and out into the world to do good, would be awesome. show less
This book works well if you're looking for a "how-to" style informational workbook. It offers insights into how to teach children empathy both at home, and in public, and can translate into the classroom.
I was at the end of the school year when I read this so I was unable to try some of the activities mentioned in the book, but I would like to go back and perhaps build some of them into my lessons for next year. Some of the activities seem too young for a teen audience and even border on show more ridiculous but there seems to be a method to the madness. There are a few parts I would skip over and I don't think I would venture to have my entire class work through this book or even have an entire department let alone the school site work through it. Once I've tried it out, I'll be able to better inform on how it models in the classroom and what benefits can be derived. Simply reading the book has helped me to point out aspects from my classroom experience that would benefit me.
The author even has discussion notes for parents and educators available for download on their website.
This book looks at ways for children to learn and practice empathy in their lives which Borba (the author) feels is lacking. The book begins by saying teens are 40% less empathetic than they used to be and continues to discuss potential reasons why; spoiler: social media plays a part, naturally.
There will be some who will not like this book because it asks them to do uncomfortable emotional digging in themselves and then ask others to do the same but [hopefully] the result will be seeing more empathy in yourself and those who you teach.
**All thoughts and opinions are my own.** show less
I was at the end of the school year when I read this so I was unable to try some of the activities mentioned in the book, but I would like to go back and perhaps build some of them into my lessons for next year. Some of the activities seem too young for a teen audience and even border on show more ridiculous but there seems to be a method to the madness. There are a few parts I would skip over and I don't think I would venture to have my entire class work through this book or even have an entire department let alone the school site work through it. Once I've tried it out, I'll be able to better inform on how it models in the classroom and what benefits can be derived. Simply reading the book has helped me to point out aspects from my classroom experience that would benefit me.
The author even has discussion notes for parents and educators available for download on their website.
This book looks at ways for children to learn and practice empathy in their lives which Borba (the author) feels is lacking. The book begins by saying teens are 40% less empathetic than they used to be and continues to discuss potential reasons why; spoiler: social media plays a part, naturally.
There will be some who will not like this book because it asks them to do uncomfortable emotional digging in themselves and then ask others to do the same but [hopefully] the result will be seeing more empathy in yourself and those who you teach.
**All thoughts and opinions are my own.** show less
The author makes some strong points on the value of empathy. She overemphasizes the value of this ability to the point of criticism of other valuable abilities. I hope to improve this area but not exclusively to focus on empathy. The focus of the book is on development of empathy in children. Michele provides ideas on how accomplish this be various interactions. I mildly recommend this book.
The 6Rs of bullying prevention : best proven practices to combat cruelty and build respect by Michele Borba
This book belongs in every school’s staff-resources collection. Its value is incalculable if it spares one child from bullying and years of post-trauma, but I actually believe it has the potential to transform entire schools. Complete review at http://cynthiaparkhill.blogspot.com/2016/07/6rs-of-bullying-prevention.html
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Statistics
- Works
- 20
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 702
- Popularity
- #36,076
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 9
- ISBNs
- 45
- Languages
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