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Top Child Expert's No. 1 Parenting Rule After 5,000 Kids

Child development expert Siggie Cohen reveals the daily communication mistake parents make and how one simple rule changes everything.

If you've talked to thousands of kids and their parents, patterns start jumping out at you. Siggie Cohen has done exactly that — working with over 5,000 families — and she says there's one communication mistake she watches parents repeat every single day. The fix, she insists, is surprisingly simple.

Cohen doesn't dress it up. Parents often default to commands and statements when they should be reaching for questions. It sounds minor. It isn't. The way you frame what you say to a child shapes whether they tune you out or actually engage — and that gap compounds over years of parenting.

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The expert is also clear that this isn't a pass on discipline. Knowing when to set firm, non-negotiable boundaries matters just as much as knowing when to invite a conversation. The skill is reading which moment you're in — and most parents, even well-meaning ones, misread it constantly.

For traders and finance-minded readers, think of it like market timing: the right move executed at the wrong moment still costs you. Cohen's framework is about matching your communication tool to the situation your kid is actually in, not the one you assume they're in. That context-awareness is the real edge she's selling.

If you're a parent — or you work with kids in any capacity — Cohen's approach is worth the deep dive. Her core argument is that better questions beat better lectures, every time. Continue reading at US Top News and Analysis.

Continue reading at US Top News and Analysis →

Frequently Asked Questions

Q.Who is Siggie Cohen and why should I trust her parenting advice?

Siggie Cohen is a child development expert who has worked with over 5,000 families, giving her extensive real-world experience spotting patterns in parent-child communication.

Q.What is the No. 1 communication mistake parents make according to Siggie Cohen?

Cohen identifies a specific daily communication error that parents repeatedly make with their kids, which she says can backfire — though she emphasizes the fix is surprisingly simple.

Q.Does Siggie Cohen's parenting approach mean avoiding all firm boundaries?

No. Cohen explicitly says knowing when to set clear boundaries is still essential; her advice focuses on pairing boundary-setting with more effective use of questions at the right moments.

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