Your privacy is a PRIMARY consideration of AskDrSears.com. Your
e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
announcing news, events and special offers available only
AskDrSears.com registered users.
Baby Sling Closeout Special! Extended through May until sold out!
Buy a baby sling for a friend and get one free for yourself or get just one at 50% off.
Buy one get one free Discount code: freesling
Or 50% off your babysling Discount code: halfoff expires: 05/30/08
*Not valid in conjuction with any other offers.
Your privacy is a PRIMARY consideration of AskDrSears.com. Your
e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
announcing news, events and special offers available only
AskDrSears.com registered users.
DISCIPLINING THE SPECIAL NEEDS CHILD: 11 TIME-TESTED TIPS
Disciplining a child who is
"differently-abled" is likely to bring out the best and the worst in a parent.
Parents try to help a child make up for what's missing by increasing their love
and attention, yet children with special needs trigger special frustrations in
parents. Be prepared to run out of patience. We focus on Down Syndrome in this section, but what we say applies
equally to any cause of developmental delay. Our son, Stephen, has Down
Syndrome. Our most difficult adjustment in discipline was learning to cope with
development in slow motion. Most children go through predictable stages of
development. You know about when to expect what behavior and how long it will
last. You know that two-year-old temper tantrums will diminish once the child
learns to speak. Knowing you don't have to weather this undesirable behavior
indefinitely helps you cope. With the developmentally-disabled child, stages
seem to go on forever, as do the frustrations in child and parents. For example,
it may take this child a year to accomplish three month's worth of "normal"
speech development. Parenting a special needs child is a tough job. The ups and
downs and joys and sorrows are magnified: You rejoice at each accomplishment,
you worry about each new challenge.
1. Don't compare
Your child is special. Comparing your child to others of
the same age is not fair. The real breakthrough that helped us come to terms
with Stephen's "disability" was when we quit focusing on what he was missing and
instead started enjoying him for himself. We had to overcome our tendency to
focus on his "problem" to the extent that he became a project instead of a
person. "I'll become an expert on Down Syndrome," I thought; "Read everything,
go to all the conferences, join all the support groups. We'll even write the
definitive book on children with Down Syndrome." This didn't work. It took me
two years to strike a balance. Martha's maternal drive helped her focus more on
Stephen the baby rather than his condition. She determined that what he needed
most from us was a full dose of attachment parenting, while not denying that he
had special needs that required a special kind of parenting. We also realized
that we could not let Stephen's "condition" distract all of our energy away from
the needs of the whole family.
2. Change your standards
Before a baby is even born, parents imagine what
the child's life will be like: piano lessons, baseball stardom, graduating from
college, etc. Even with a normal child, you have to reconcile these dreams with
reality as your child grows up. With a special needs child, this is a bigger
task. You learn to live in the present. The milestones of the child's life are
less defined and the future less predictable—though your child may surprise you!
In the meantime, set your standards for your child at an appropriate level. For
example, reset your anger buttons. Your child will do some things that
exasperate you. Our then four-year-old, Stephen, after watching his siblings
throw floating toys into the pool, threw my pocket recorder into the pool. In
his mind, this was daddy's toy, and it was okay to throw toys into the swimming
pool. Naturally, I was angry at losing not only a $300.00 recorder, but all the
time it had taken to get those notes on tape. Martha reminded me that Stephen
was just doing what was developmentally appropriate for him. I was the one who
had behaved developmentally inappropriately. I was old enough to know not to
leave the "toy" within Stephen's reach.
3. Different doesn't mean inferior
In children's logic, being different
equates with being inferior. This feeling may be more of a problem for siblings
and other kids than for the developmentally-delayed child, at least in the early
years. Most children measure their self-worth by how they believe others
perceive them. Be sure the child's siblings don't fall into this "different
equals less" trap. This is why the term "special needs" is not only socially
correct, but it's a positive term, not a value judgment. In reality, all
children could wear this label.
4. Different doesn't mean fragile
While it is true you have to change your
expectations of a special needs child, you don't have to lower your standards of
discipline! It's tempting to get lax and let special needs children get by with
behaviors you wouldn't tolerate in other children. He needs to know, early on,
what behavior you expect. Many parents wait too long to start behavior training.
It's much harder to redirect an eighty pound child than a thirty pounder. Like
all children, this child must be taught to adjust to family routines, to obey,
and to manage himself.
5. Attachment parenting for the special needs child
A special needs child can
bring out the best and the worst in a family. David, a baby with Down Syndrome,
was born into a sensitive and close-communicating family. Immediately after
David's birth, I had a long discussion with the parents and their six-year-old
daughter Aimee about surviving and thriving with a special needs child. The
family first had to come to terms with the normal "why us" feelings and get to
the "where do we go now" level. But then I explained to these parents the need
level concept: every baby comes with a level of need, and every family has a
level of giving. By practicing attachment parenting and getting connected, the
whole family will develop a sixth sense about David, a quality of caring that no
book or counselor will be able to give them. With all babies, attachment
parenting is highly desirable; with a special needs child it's necessary and a
matter of survival.
I pointed out to them the probable pitfalls. Avoid treating David like a
project. Join support groups, learn from the real experts: parents who have
thrived with their Down Syndrome children. Above all, remember your
vulnerability: Love for your child brings out the overwhelming desire to devote
100 percent of family energy to helping David be all he can be. That leaves
nothing for the needs of the rest of the family. What David needs most is
support from a stable and harmonious family.
It was also necessary to involve the older sibling in these early
discussions. I pointed out to Aimee that she may feel a bit left out as her
parents appear to give David a lot of the energy that previously went into her,
especially since she had been an only child. That didn't mean they loved her
less. And the parents needed to guard against Aimee feeling deprived. They
involved Aimee in David's care, plus made sure that she got special attention
unrelated to David. The end result was not only that David thrived, but the
whole family's sensitivity level went up a notch. Their marriage improved; and
Aimee became a deeply-sensitive child, a quality which carried over into her
social life outside the home.
6. Provide structure
Special needs children need developmentally-
appropriate structure, but it requires sensitivity on your part to figure out
what is needed when. Watch the child, not the calendar. Try to get inside his
head.
7. Beware of the overattachment syndrome
It is very easy for your whole life to revolve
around your special style of parenting, to the extent that it becomes an end in
itself. This is a lose-lose situation. You lose the joy of parenting, and you
lose your ability to be flexible. Eventually, you will either burn out or you
will break.
8. View behaviors as signals of needs
Everything children do tells you
something about what they need. This principle is particularly true with special
needs children. Sharon, a ten-year-old with Down Syndrome, would go from child
to child, pinching each of her peers in her mainstream class. Rather than
extinguish this behavior by slapping her hands, the wise teacher perceived this
conduct as Sharon's way of communicating, and it gave Sharon distinction:
"Sharon's pinch." The teacher used the principle of replacement behavior to channel Sharon's pinching into worthwhile
activity, while preserving the child's need to communicate. She gave Sharon the
job of passing out papers to each child in the class. Now instead of pinching
them she could hand them a paper, and each one (with prompting from the teacher)
acknowledged Sharon.
9. Value the child
Don't focus on the disability. Practice attachment
parenting to the highest degree that you can without shortchanging other members
of the family. Feeling loved and valued from attachment parenting helps a child
cope with the lack of a particular ability.
10. Help your child build a sense of responsibility
There is a natural
tendency to want to rush in and do things for a developmentally-delayed child.
For these children, the principle of "teach them how to fish rather than give
them a fish" applies doubly. The sense of accomplishment that accompanies being
given responsibility gives the child a sense of value and raises her self-worth.
11. Give your child choices
(Be sure you like all the alternatives.)
Initially, you may have to guide your child into making a choice, but just the
ability to make a choice helps the child feel important. Present the choices in
the child's language, which may mean using pictures, pointing, and reinforcing
your verbal instructions (which may not be fully understood) with visual ones.
The more you use this exercise, the more you will learn about your child's
abilities, preferences, and receptive language skills at each stage of
development.
As with all children, your job as parents is to arm the child with self-
control tools so that eventually he can discipline himself. Instead of saying to
Stephen, "Stop kicking your sister," we'd say "Stephen, control your feet."
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.