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10 TECHNIQUES TO SHAPE CHILDREN'S BEHAVIOR
Shaping means providing the child with cues and
reinforcements that direct them toward desirable behavior. As you shape
behavior, the child's personality tags along and also changes and improves. The
main ways to shape a child's behavior are through:
praise
selective ignoring
time-out
consequences
motivators
reminders
negotiation
withdrawing privileges
humor
1. PRAISE
Praise is a valuable shaper; children want to please you and
keep your approval. Yet, you can easily overdo it. Praise the behavior, not the
person. Praises like "good girl" or "good boy" risk misinterpretation and are
best reserved for training pets. These labels are too heavy for some children.
("If I don't do well, does that mean I'm bad?") Better is: "You did a good job
cleaning your room." "That's a good decision." "I like the way you used lots
of color in this picture." The child will see that the praise is sincere since
you made the effort to be specific; it shows that you're paying attention. For
quickies try "Great job!" or "Way to go!" or even "Yesss!" To avoid the "I'm
valued by my performance" trap, acknowledge the act and let the child conclude
the act is praiseworthy. If you praise every other move the child makes he will
either get addicted to praise, or wonders why you are so desperate to make him
feel good about himself. Be realistic. You don't have to praise, or even
acknowledge, things he just does for the joy of it, for his own reasons.
Shaping through praise works well if you have a specific behavior goal that
you want to reach, for example, stopping whining. Initially, you may feel like
you are acknowledging nearly every pleasant sound your child makes ("I like your
sweet voice"). Eventually, as the whining subsides, the immediate need for
praise lessens (of course, a booster shot is needed for relapses) and you move
on to shaping another behavior.
Change praises
To keep your child's attention, change the delivery
of your accolades. As you pass by the open door of the cleaner room, say: "Good
job!" Show with body language a thumbs-up signal for the child who dresses
herself. Written praises are a boon in large families. They show extra care.
Private praises help, too. Leave little "nice work" notes on pillows, yellow
"post-its" on homework, messages that convey that you noticed and that you are
pleased. Children need praise, but don't overdo it. You don't want a child to
look around for applause whenever she lifts a finger, like a dog expecting a
cookie every time he does a trick.
As an exercise in praise-giving, write down how many times you praised and
how many times you criticized your child in the last 24 hours. We call these
pull-ups and put-downs. If your pull-ups don't significantly outnumber your
pull-downs, you are shaping your child in the wrong direction.
Praise genuinely
Praise loses its punch if you shower acclaim on
usual and expected behavior; yet when the child who habitually strikes out
finally hits the ball, that's praiseworthy. Simply acknowledge expected
behavior, rather than gushing praise.
Acknowledgment is dispassionate praise that shapes a child to please himself
rather than perform for approval. Don't make up fake kudos. The child will see
through them and begin to question even genuine praise. For example, before you
praise, try to read your child's body language to see whether the child feels
the job is praiseworthy: "Daddy, look at my drawing I did at school. I got an
'A'." If she approaches you eagerly, displaying her picture for all to see,
this child deserves praise that shares her excitement. If she pulls the paper
out of her schoolbag and tosses it on the kitchen table, praise may not be in
order.
Use the art of complimenting
Teach your child to be comfortable giving and receiving compliments. Tell your
child, "What a handsome boy you are" or "How pretty you look in that dress!"
Eye and body contact during your delivery reinforces the sincerity of your
acknowledgment. Make sure you're sincere. When you hear your children
complimenting one another, compliment yourself for your modeling.
Children with weak self-worth have difficulty giving and receiving
compliments. They are so hung up on how they imagine the receiver will take
their tribute, that they clam up; they feel so unworthy of any compliment that
they shrug off the compliment and put off the complimenter. If you are like
that as a person, learn to give and take a compliment yourself so that you can
model this to your child. Compliment yourself, "I feel good about the sale I
made today!" Acknowledge your child's praise, "You're the best mommy." "Thank
you, honey, I like to hear that." Some mothers (and fathers) hear these words
often, yet deny the truth of their child's words by the outward response they
give (sighing, gulping, frowning, shrugging or grimacing) and by their internal
guilt trip. If this is you, get some help believing what your child intuitively
knows—you're the best parent for this child. Parental self-image directly
affects children's self-confidence and the ability to give and receive
compliments comfortably.
Avoid praises with a hidden agenda
I had been on our teenager's case
about dressing more modestly. One day I said, "I like your new wardrobe." She
saw right through this, and took it as a put-down of her old wardrobe. She
interpreted my comment as trying to manipulate what she wears. A better
approach would have been more specific and more centered on her: "That longer
shirt really makes you look graceful" or "Classy jacket—you look ready for
college."
Problems with praise
While appropriately-used praise can shape
behavior, it's not the only way to reinforce good behavior. In some ways it's
superficial. Praise is an external motivator. The ultimate goal of discipline
is self-discipline—inner motivation. We praise good grades and have
always motivated our children by planting the idea that good grades are one
ticket to success. We always temper our praise with "How do you feel about your
report card? We want you to get good grades mainly because it makes you happy."
When possible, turn the focus back on the child's feelings: "You played well at
the recital. I bet you're relieved and proud." Best results with praise to
shape behavior is setting the conditions that help children know how and when to
praise themselves.
EXPECT GOOD BEHAVIOR
Excessive praise will give children the message that obedience and good behavior
are optional. It's better to give your child the message that he is doing
exactly what you expect, not something out of the ordinary. Children are
programmed to meet your expectations. Sometimes all that is needed for you to
break a negative cycle is to expect good behavior. Treat them as if they really
are going to choose right. When parents don't expect obedience, they generally
don't get it.
2. SELECTIVE IGNORING
To preserve parental sanity, in our large family we
run a tight ship in certain situations. In other areas we are more lax. We
have learned to ignore smallies and concentrate on biggies. A smallie is a
behavior which is annoying but doesn't harm humans, animals, or property, or
which even if uncorrected does not lead to a biggie. These childish
irresponsibility's will self-correct with time and maturity. Ignoring helps
your child respect the limits of a parent's job description (e.g., "I don't do
petty arguments"). One day two five-year-olds were playing in our front yard,
and they got into a toy squabble. No one was getting hurt. They tried to drag
Martha into the ring. She simply said, "You kids are too big to act like this.
That's such a silly little toy to get upset about. I'm not even going to waste
my time getting involved." She walked away. The kids got the point and settled
the problem themselves.
Ignoring undesirable behaviors works best if you readily acknowledge
desirable ones. The ignored interrupter learns to enter adult conversations
with "excuse me" once you reinforce the use of these polite addresses. Ignore
the misbehavior, not the child.
Harmless behaviors fade both as your tolerance level widens and your
reactions don't reinforce the child's behavior. It's helpful to gain practice
in selective ignoring in the early years of a child's life to prepare you for
the challenges yet to come—accepting teenagers with their unconventional dress
and hairstyles, loud music, and moody behaviors.
3. HELP YOUR CHILD LEARN THAT CHOICES HAVE CONSEQUENCES
Experiencing the consequences of their choices is one
of the most effective ways children can learn self-discipline. These lessons
really last because they come from real life. Most success in life depends on
making wise choices. Being able to think ahead about the positive or negative
consequences of an action and choose accordingly is a skill we want our children
to learn.
Building a child's natural immunity to bad choices
Letting natural
consequences teach your child to make right choices is a powerful learning tool.
Experience is the best teacher: He's careless, he falls; he grabs something hot,
he gets burned; he leaves his bicycle in the driveway, it gets stolen. Wise
parents protect their children so they don't get seriously hurt, but do not
overprotect to the extent the child doesn't learn the consequences of his folly.
Some bruises and scrapes along the way are unavoidable and educational.Children
make unwise choices on the way to becoming responsible adults. Children must
experience the consequences of their actions in order to learn from them.
Within reason and safe limits, let your infant explore, fail, bump, and learn.
Expect your preschooler to help clean up his messes. Let your school-age child
experience the penalty for not completing homework by bedtime. After years of
small inoculations of consequences, the child enters adolescence at least
partially immunized against bad choices, having had some genuine experience with
decision-making. Children learn better from their own mistakes than from your
preventive preaching.
Adolescence
is a time when
the consequences of wrong choices are serious. The child who has learned to
deal with smallies is more likely to be successful with biggies. Being a wise
immunizer means keeping a balance between overprotecting your child and being
negligent ("Let him get hurt, he'll learn.") In the first case, the child
enters adolescence with little practice at handling inevitable conflicts and
risks. In the second case, the child feels no one cares. Either way, there are
rough times ahead.
Sometimes the best solution is to offer your child guidance, state your
opinion, and then back off and let the consequence teach your child. Use each
consequence as a teachable moment, not an opportunity to gloat. Avoid sentences
that begin with "I told you so..." or "If you would have listened to me..."
But to be sure that your child learns these little lessons of life, talk through
each situation. Replay the tape so that your child gets the point that choices
count, and his actions affect what happens. You want your child to realize that
he is happier and his life runs more smoothly when he makes wise, though perhaps
not easy, choices. Let the consequence speak for itself. The child spills her
soda and there's no more soda – without your commentary.
Use logical consequences to correct
Besides letting natural consequences teach your child, you can
set up parent-made consequences tailored to have lasting learning value for your
child. Here's a logical consequence that parents in our practice tried: "Our
son was four-years-old, and we had just moved into a new house. He had gotten a
new bedroom set and was feeling very proud and grown up, enjoying his privacy
and playing with his friends. When it was time for his friends to leave, and
our son became angry and kept slamming the door. I asked him to stop and
explained patiently why he shouldn't keep slamming the door. I told him (after
thirty minutes) that if this behavior continued, he would no longer enjoy the
privacy of a door: "Brett, if you keep slamming the door, I'm going to take it
off. (He got this "Yeah, sure, dad's going to take the door off" look of
disbelief on his face). For the next three days every time he got a little
upset, he slammed the door. So on the fourth day our son went out to play, and
when he returned he found his door had been removed from the hinges. But he
only noticed it when he went to slam it and it was not there. A week later we
put it back. Four years have passed, and he hasn't slammed the door since."
Our then ten-year-old, Erin, treasured her new bike, but now and then she
would carelessly leave it overnight on the front sidewalk. We kept reminding
her to put her bike in the garage at the end of the day so it wouldn't get
stolen, but she still often forgot. So one day we hid the bike. When she got
up the next morning, there was no bike. "Perhaps it got stolen?" we offered.
Erin was heartbroken; she had already had one bike stolen because she left it
out. We gave her time to work through her feelings of loss, guilt, remorse,
anger—all the emotions that one has when you blow it and it's your fault. Then
we rescued the bike, and Erin. She realized this loss could have been real, and
the bike slept safely in the garage thereafter.
For the most learning value, balance negative with positive consequences: The
child who frequently practices the piano gets the thrill of moving through his
books quickly and receiving hearty applause at his recital. The child who
consistently takes care of her bicycle merits a new one when she outgrows it;
otherwise, she gets a used one. The child who puts his sports equipment away in
the same place each time gets the nice feeling of always being able to find his
favorite bat or soccer ball.
In these examples, no amount of punishment could have had the lasting
teaching value of natural and logical consequences. With punishment, children
see no connection between their behavior and the discipline. With consequences,
the child makes the connection between the behavior and the results. You plant
a lesson of life: take responsibility for your behavior.
4. MOTIVATORS AND REWARDS
Children and adults behave according to the
pleasure principle: behavior that's rewarding continues, behavior that's
unrewarding ceases. While you don't have to go to the extreme of playing
behavioral scientist, dangling cheese in front of little rats to direct them
through the maze, you can invent creative ways to motivate desirable behavior
with rewards. Motivators help family life run more smoothly: "First one in bed
picks the story."
A word of caution
Prizes are a way to entice your child toward goals
you've made for him. The ultimate goal is self-discipline – a child
behaves because she wants to or because she knows you expect good behavior. She
shouldn't expect a prize each time she behaves well. A friend who home-schooled
her child until he was eight found that when he entered school as an already a
strong reader who was motivated by the pleasure he found in reading, the reward
system for reading used by the teacher was not appropriate for him. He made out
like a bandit. Slowly his motivation shifted from reading for pleasure to
reading for prizes. Ideally, a job well done like reading and finishing a book
should be its own reward. Some children may need rewards to get them to read in
the first place, but you run the risk that these children will never read for
pleasure.
Still, kids are human, and humans go for that chunk of cheese. You do a job
well partly because of the rewards you expect to get. If "rewards" or "bribes"
offend the moralist in you, call them "motivators." An attachment-parented
child is more likely to be motivated by social rewards than by prizes: "This
coupon is good for one lunch date with Mommy or Daddy."
To work, a reward must be something your child likes and truly desires. Ask
some leading questions to get ideas:
"If you could do some special things with mom or dad, what would they be?"
"If you could go somewhere with a friend, where would you like to go?
"If you had a dollar, what would you buy?"
Granting privileges and rewards are discipline tools to set limits and get
jobs done. "If you hurry and do a good job cleaning your room, you might get
finished in time to play outside before dinner."
Rewards that work
The best rewards are ones that are natural
consequences of good behavior: "You're taking such good care of your train set.
Let's go to the train store and get another boxcar." The natural consequences
of good behavior are not always motivating enough in themselves. Sometimes it's
necessary to fabricate a reward.
Reward charts
Charts are a helpful way to motivate young children.
They see their progress and participate in the daily steps toward the reward.
The chart stands out as a testimony of good behavior for all to see. Charts
work because they are interactive and fun. Even the business world uses charts
as profit motivators. Throughout life many children will be surrounded by
performance charts, so they may as well get used to seeing them in their home.
When nothing else seems to be working, behavior charts help a child get over the
hump of extinguishing an undesirable behavior. As you weed out undesirable
behaviors one by one, your child gradually gets used to the feelings that come
with good behavior, and these feelings become self-motivating. The need for
charting lessens as your child grows, and you will need to find new clutter for
your kitchen wall. In making reward charts, consider these tips:
Follow the basic rule: KISMIF – Keep it simple, make it
fun.
Work with your child. Let your child help construct the chart and make
daily entries.
Construct the chart so that the child has a visual image of closing in on
the reward. We have gotten best results from a "connect the dots" chart. Have
the child draw a picture of what she wants. Then outline the periphery of the
picture with dots several inches apart. With each day of successful behavior
(e.g., each time he remembers to take out the trash) the child connects another
dot. When all the dots are connected, the child collects the prize.
Display the chart in a high visibility location. (We strategically place
ours on the wall along the path between the kitchen table and the refrigerator.)
Giving the chart a high profile and high visibility gives the child easy access,
serves as a frequent reminder of the desired behavior, and lets her proudly
exhibit her progress.
Make the chart interactive: connecting dots, pasting on stickers or
different colored stars, anything more interesting than a check mark.
Charts can contain positive and negative entries, reminders of
both types of behaviors. In my office we use daily charts to correct bedwetting
in children older than five. The child puts a happy face sticker on the chart
every morning he wakes up dry and a sad face sticker on the chart on mornings he
wakes up wet. If the happy faces outnumber the sad faces at the end of the
week, the child gets to choose where he wants to go for lunch on Saturday.
Keep the time until the prize is collected short. Frequent, simple
rewards keep motivation high. For a toddler, use end-of-the-hour rewards; for
the preschooler, end-of-the-day rewards; for the school-age child, end-of-the-
week rewards. A month is an unreachable eternity for any child. For the
preschool child, rather than set a calendar time, refer to an event such as
"dinner time" or "after Sunday school." Novelty wears off quickly for children.
Change charts frequently.
Creative rewards
Besides charts, design your own clever motivators.
Because her six-year-old's toy of the month was a doll house, a mother chose a
piece of furniture or clothing for the doll as a weekly reward for the child
keeping her room tidy. And she related the reward to the behavior: "When you
show me you can keep your room tidy, then we'll furnish your doll house." She
used periodic reminders: "Let's keep your room as nice as you do your doll
house."
To keep order among the seven-to-nine-year-old boys at our twice-monthly Cub
Scout meetings, we use the "good behavior candle." The object is to burn
the candle all the way down so the whole group can have a treat. At the
beginning of the meeting we light the candle. The candle stays lit until a
disruption occurs. The disrupter has to blow out the candle. The sooner the
candle burns down (e.g., the fewer disruptions), the sooner the boys get a
prize. Consider what's going on in their impressionable minds. Each time
someone snuffs out a candle, they halt the progress toward the prize. Since
children don't like to delay gratification, they're motivated to snuff out their
own disruptive behavior.
The ticket system
Tina
and her four-year-old daughter Haley were very connected. Haley had been a
high-need baby and turned into a strong-willed child. Here is how Tina
channeled Haley's obstinate behavior in the right direction and had fun doing
it:
Haley and I were butting heads, and it seemed like our whole day was
becoming increasingly full of negatives. All the techniques I'd tried before
weren't working. So I tried what we fondly refer to as the ticket system. This
took incredible stress off me as a mother, and I was no longer the bad guy. I
give her three 'free' tickets to start the day. She earns tickets for helping
without being asked, for doing assigned chores, for having a good attitude, etc.
She loses tickets for whining, complaining, refusing to obey (which eliminated
the on-going 'By the time I count to three' line that I was always using). The
tickets became like gold, and after a while she became more and more eager to
please. At the end of the day or the week Haley got a special treat that was
prearranged according to the number of coupons she had collected (frozen yogurt,
a movie, a hamburger, etc.).
With Haley, it was very difficult to see the 'positive' in her behavior.
The ticket system forced me to 'catch' her at being good, as opposed to just
seeing the bad. I found myself saying things such as, 'I liked the way you
smiled when you woke up this morning' or 'Thank you for waiting your turn on the
swing without screaming or crying.' Delayed gratification was not Haley's
strong suit, so I would carry tickets with me everywhere we went, so that she
not only heard my words of praise, but saw tangible evidence of her good
behavior. This also enabled me to take them from her just as quickly to show
the immediate consequence of her unacceptable behavior. This game helped her to
understand that I still loved her and that she was a good person, but there were
guidelines that needed to be followed. It helped me not to yell and continually
feel the need to raise my voice. It was also a system my husband Steve could
quickly pick up after a hard day's work and on the weekends without feeling left
out. We've also allowed baby-sitters to use it to reward Haley for cooperating.
For us, the ticket system has eliminated the need to spank, and 'time-out'
is reserved for those really trying times when separation is best for both us
and Haley. Altogether, it has greatly lessened the power struggle that I have
felt with Haley since she was very young. This is not a system for everyone's
problems. It's very time-consuming for us, and Haley because it constantly keep
us informed if we're slipping up on our duties. It is, however, a lot of fun
and well worth the effort.
5. REMINDERS
"But I forgot." "But I didn't know I was supposed to." As
lame as these excuses sound to adults, children do honestly forget and need
reminders to keep their behavior on track.
Reminders are cues that jog the hazy memory of a busy child. They may be
subtle prompts in the form of a look that tells the about-to-be-mischievous
child, "You know better," or a short verbal cue that turns on the child's
memory: "Ah! Where does that plate belong?" Some situations call for a
major reminder and follow through that rings the child's memory bell loud and
clear: "Remember what we've said about running in the street! A car could hit
you! You have to look both ways!" (See related topic, Danger
Discipline).
Reminders are less likely to provoke a refusal or a power struggle than are
outright commands. You have already painted the scene in your child's mind, he
knows what you expect, and he has previously agreed to it. Reminders prompt a
child to complete a behavior equation on her own. You give a clue and the child
fills in the blanks. You stand over a pile of homework sprawled on the floor,
then scowl disapprovingly. He gets the message and picks up the homework
without you even saying a word.
Written reminders
Go over better with children who don't like to feel
controlled. You avoid a face-off. It's up to the child to carry out the
reminder in good time to avoid getting a verbal direction. A recent note on
Erin's door read, "Please remove the dishes from your room before they start
growing things." Frequent reminders of what's acceptable and what's not lets
the child know what is normal for your home.
6. THE ART OF NEGOTIATING
Bargaining with your child doesn't compromise your
authority. It strengthens it. Children respect parents who are willing to
listen to them. Until they leave home, children must accept your authority—
that's not negotiable; but that doesn't mean you can't listen to their side of
things.
Negotiating is a win-win situation that benefits both parents and children.
Parents show that they are approachable and open to another's viewpoint—a
quality children become more sensitive about as they approach adolescence. In
teen years you will find that negotiating becomes your main behavior management
tool, because adolescents like to be treated as intellectual equals and expect
you to respect their viewpoint. If used wisely, negotiating improves
communication between parent and child. A stubborn insistence on having your
own way has the opposite effect. "I just can't talk to my dad," said Jessica, a
teenager whose father's attitude was "Don't confuse me with the facts, my mind
is made up." Even the wishes of a seven or eight-year-old should be open to
negotiation. This is a warm-up time to help you sharpen your negotiating skills
for the years ahead.
"Why do I have to go to bed at 9 o'clock?" argued ten-year-old Margo."What
time do you think is a good bedtime for you?" asked Father Negotiator."Ten
o'clock," Margo suggested."That extra hour means a lot to you doesn't it? What
would you do during that extra hour?""I could read," Margo pleaded."Remember how
tired you are the next morning when you stay up late. You fall asleep at
school," Father reminded her."But that was last year, dad. I'm older now,"
Margo countered."Yes, I guess you are. Let's try this," Father suggested. "On
school nights you must be in bed at nine o'clock and you can read in bed until
9:30. On nights when you don't have school the next day you can stay up until
ten o'clock."
The child thought this was acceptable, and her reasoning was validated. The
father achieved his goal being sure his child got enough sleep. He knew that
after five minutes of reading in bed she would probably fall asleep, which she
did. As this volley went back and forth, the father was earning points with his
child. The child was getting the message that "I can talk to my dad. He is
reasonable, and he really does care about what's good for me. My father
listens, and he has some wise things to say."
Sometimes let your child take the lead. Use a well-known negotiating tool:
Meet the child where he is, and then bring him to where you want him to be. For
example, you want your child to sit and read a book with you, but he's intent on
wrestling as evidenced by his grabbing your arm and showing signs that he wants
physical play. Let him spend a bit of energy rough-housing on the floor. Tire
him out enough so that he can then sit still and read the book. This is not
giving into the child or letting the child be in control, it's simply being a
smart negotiator. It's a way to bring your child back to your agenda after a
short excursion that satisfies the needs of his agenda.
Follow the house rules
Command and exhibit respect during
negotiations. If your child starts yelling or acting disrespectful of your
authority, close the discussion: "You must not talk to me in that tone, Susan.
I'm the mother, you're the child, and I expect respect." This sets the tone for
future negotiations. You may have to remind your child of this non-negotiable
fact of family life often during the pre-teen and teen years. Because of the
constant haggling that older children do, it is easy to let your authority slip
away. Don't! You need this authority to keep order in the house, and your
child will need to respect authority to get along in life.
There will be situations when you don't want to dicker with your child. You
know you're right and your child is being unreasonable. Before the child works
himself into a dither, break off the negotiations. That's the parents'
prerogative. "That's a no-good rotten TV program, and I've told you before why
I am not going to let you watch it. I will not change my mind about this so
don't even start on me." Then walk away. Children need to learn when parents
mean business. Parents can't use this approach every time or children will see
them as tyrants Be prepared to allow the child to watch other programs that are
acceptable.
If used wisely, negotiation can become a valuable communication tool, helping
children develop their reasoning abilities. Teach your child that negotiations
work best when everyone is calm and peaceful, not in the heat of the moment.
"No for now, but I'll talk it over with your dad and get back to you tonight."
"I don't like the way you are talking to me. Come back later when you're
feeling more peaceful." When you're not sure, or feeling pressured, decide not
to decide.
8. WITHDRAWING PRIVILEGES
Withdrawing privileges is one of the few
behavior shapers you never run out of. Kids will always want something from
you. For this correction technique to have a good chance of preventing
recurrence of a misbehavior, the child must naturally connect the privilege
withdrawal with the behavior: "If you ride your tricycle into the street, you
lose the use of your tricycle for the rest of the day."
Your child dawdles and misses the morning carpool, so he walks to school.
This correction technique is commonly used in adult law enforcement: You get
caught driving drunk and you lose your license. But this doesn't cure your
drinking problem. So you see, withdrawing privileges has its limits as a
discipline technique. What does withholding television have to do with being
home in time for supper, a child may wonder.
Losing privileges can work if it's part of a pre-agreed behavior
management strategy decided on during a family meeting. Parents state the
behaviors they expect from their children and announce that part of the fun of
being a parent is granting privileges to the children so they can have some fun
too. But if the children don't hold up their end of the bargain, the parents
can not grant those privileges. So, being home in time for supper gets you the
privilege of a half-hour of TV rather than the TV time being an inalienable
right of every citizen of the household. As children get older they need to
learn a valuable lesson for life: With increasing privileges come increasing
responsibilities.
9. NO NATTERING
"You're
picking your nose again." "Watch where you're going." "Late again!" "Can't
you do anything right?" Persistent negative comments like these, called
nattering, nip away at a child's self-worth. Studies show that nattering does
not improve behavior; it actually worsens it. Nattering is especially defeating
in children with a poor self-image. Nattering and repeating commands make
children nervous. Some children exhibit more than their fair share of negative
behavior, but constantly reminding them produces more negative behavior. It is
better to purposely pick out some redeeming qualities and concentrate on the
positives ("I like the way you stepped aside for your sister"). You will see
the negatives melt away.
Continuing to talk, or repeating advice that you've previously given, tells
the child that you don't trust her to carry out a simple request, such as "Put a
load of laundry in, please." If you add a string of qualifiers, you're teaching
her you don't trust her to do it right (your way). If you can't stop
"advising," start writing notes.
10. HOLDING A FAMILY MEETING
Family meetings are good times to set house rules.
You are relaxed and the children are more receptive. Spur-of-the-moment rules
("You're grounded!") made when you are angry are likely to be unfair and
unfollowed. Getting together to sort out discipline problems is a valuable way
for parents and children to express their concerns. Discipline problems that
involve one child should be handled privately, but there are times when all the
children get a bit lax in the self-control department and the whole family needs
a reminder. Suppose your house is continually a mess. Call a family meeting
and invite suggestions from the children on how to keep the house tidy. Use a
chalkboard to make it more businesslike. Write down the problem and propose
solutions. Put together a "kids want/parents want" list in order to set goals.
To avoid chore wars, we assign each child a room to tidy. Then we know who is
responsible and who to compliment. Formulate house rules for happier living.
Arriving at a general consensus is better than voting, which has winners and
losers. Try a suggestion box and have the children write their suggestions on
little cards. You'll learn a lot about your living habits that way. I got a
suggestion from my teenage daughter: "Daddy, please ask me to help instead of
giving orders." You can use family councils to help a child solve a problem.
Develop a share-and-care atmosphere. Make the meeting fun. Besides your living
room, try other meeting places, such as a family picnic at the park. Meetings
shape family behavior and are a forum in which to foster family communication.
AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers
of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice
on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual
needs.