A parent coach helps you unravel the mystery of your child’s behaviors, so you can support & motivate them with ease
Parenting a child who moves through the world differently than you do is challenging.
You want to be there for them: Helping them with their schoolwork, building up their confidence, and equipping them with the toolkit they need to succeed in life.
But no matter how many different ways you try to support or motivate them…. You just can’t seem to get through.
Feelings of frustration, bewilderment, guilt, and despair are completely normal, especially if your home becomes a war zone when it’s time to do homework, prepare for the day, or go to bed.
This is where a parent coach can help.
Research Based Parent Education
Our courses are derived from the following research based methods
Kazdin Parent Management Training (PMT)
The Kazdin Method of Parent Management Training (PMT), developed by Dr. Alan Kazdin, is an evidence-based approach designed to reduce challenging behaviors in children by teaching parents practical strategies to shape positive behavior. Rooted in behavioral principles, the method emphasizes positive reinforcement, praise, and clear communication rather than punishment or negative attention. Parents learn to set specific, achievable goals, use consistent consequences, and create structured routines that encourage desirable behaviors. By focusing on skill-building for both parents and children, the Kazdin Method helps strengthen parent-child relationships while fostering long-term behavioral and emotional regulation.
Gottman Institute - Bringing Baby Home
The Gottman Institute’s Bringing Baby Home (BBH) program is a research-based course designed to help couples navigate the transition to parenthood with stronger relationships and healthier family dynamics. Grounded in decades of relationship science, BBH teaches parents how to maintain intimacy, manage conflict constructively, and build a culture of appreciation and shared meaning while caring for a newborn. The program emphasizes practical tools for improving communication, reducing stress, and fostering emotional connection between partners, which in turn supports the baby’s social, emotional, and cognitive development. By focusing on the couple’s bond as the foundation of family well-being, BBH empowers parents to thrive during this transformative life stage.
Fair Play - Eve Rodsky
Fair Play training is based on Eve Rodsky’s Fair Play system, a research-driven framework designed to help couples achieve equity and balance in household and family responsibilities. The program teaches partners how to identify, prioritize, and fairly divide domestic tasks using a clear, structured method that emphasizes communication, accountability, and mutual respect. By reframing household management as a shared responsibility rather than defaulting to one partner, Fair Play reduces stress, resentment, and burnout while fostering harmony and collaboration. Through practical tools like the Fair Play card system, couples learn to create intentional time for self-care, relationships, and personal goals, ultimately strengthening family dynamics and overall well-being.
“Megan takes into account the whole ecosystem. So it isn't just about the learner, it isn't just about the child, it's about what we as a family are doing. She has taken a very holistic approach to how best to provide tools for not only our son but for us as well.
Also, Megan is very personable. She's a lovely human being who’s very open, and she fit in very nicely with our family and was able to connect with us at different levels. She crafts very individualized and specific learning agendas for the family, as much as for just the individual learner.
Before working with Megan, our son would do some of the work, but he wasn't really focused, he wasn't engaged. I think part of it was also we had a different tutor every week. And so there was no consistency. And those other tutors just didn't work because they assumed one kind of kid, and one kind of learner, which is a kid who is gonna like, ‘Okay, this is school, this is serious, you need to take this seriously, and you need to do the work,’ and that is not the mindset that our child has.
Now, we have more insight into how we can better support our son as a learner, and we have put a system and a support system in place to help bolster him and build his confidence and build his stamina.”
-Elida Cruz, parent of a nine-year-old student