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I hear the questions again and again: "How do I get my child to ...
...quit whining?"
...do their homework?"
...clean their room?"
...do the dishes?"
And I hear all kinds of answers for each situation. Here is my
proposal, rather than handle each situation as an isolated event, let's
look at them in light of what we know about human behavior.
Events that appear to be random, isolated behaviors actually
fit into predictable patterns for most children. If you understand the
patterns, you'll know what to do in most situations. I've developed the
five B's to reduce these patterns to five easy to remember and apply
principles.
So, let's get started...
1. Be Positive
People -- including children -- do things for one of two
reasons: to avoid pain or to pursue pleasure. As a parent, you
constantly work between these two options. If you use lots of negatives
-- like punishments -- to drive behavior, your child will do just
enough to avoid the pain. Rewarding good behaviors rather than
punishing bad ones, improves the chance that you'll get cooperation and
not conflict from your child.
Noticing unacceptable behaviors and stopping them with a
punishment is easy. It takes effort to recognize good behaviors and
praise them. You'll need to do both; but the more you recognize the
good, the less likely you are to see the bad.
2. Be Specific
Make sure you speak to your child about specific behaviors.
Whether you administer discipline or offer praise, the more specific
you make your words the better.
Let's say your child interrupts you. Many people get angry and
tell their children to "stop being rude and inconsiderate." Well,
"rude" and "inconsiderate" are interpretations of behavior, not
behaviors. A better statement would be, "I don't appreciate it when you
interrupt and challenge me. I see those behaviors as rude and
inconsiderate. The next time you speak to me, I expect you to wait your
turn to speak." Depending on the situation, you might even take a
further disciplinary action based on the rules of your household.
Whether you take further action or not, focus on specific behaviors and
not interpretations.
Here are some examples:
Good girl (or boy), bad girl (or boy), rude,
inconsiderate, disrespectful, arrogant, obnoxious, flighty, unfocused,
smart aleck, and pushy are interpretations.
Interrupting, rolling eyes, speaking loudly (or softly),
shrugging shoulders, looking away, walking away, tone of voice, and
slamming the door are specific behaviors.
3. Be Certain
People act based on what they expect to happen to them in the
future. Whether it's avoiding pain or pursuing pleasure, it's still
about expectations. Your child needs to know -- without a doubt -- what
to expect from you based on their actions.
We use pre-defined family rules and behavioral expectations as
a tool to improve certainty. Children need to know the rules. They need
to know what to expect when they follow the rules -- and when they
don't.
We put a list of five family rules and a list of both
acceptable and unacceptable behaviors on our refrigerator. We never
have to discuss what is or is not appropriate in our household. We
defined it together and wrote it down. As parents, we then enforce the
pre-agreed upon rules.
4. Be Consistent
Consistency works in close partnership with Certainty. It is
Certainty's twin in the daily struggle to raise happy, healthy,
respectful, well-behaved kids. Your children will never develop a sense
of certainty if you don't consistently apply your household rules.
For example, if whining and complaining are inappropriate
today, they had better be inappropriate tomorrow. If you give in to the
behavior to get them to stop whining, you just taught them that whining
is okay. Unacceptable behaviors should never give your child their
desired result. If it is unacceptable, it is always unacceptable. Even
the glimmer of hope that it might work for them is enough for them to
give it a try. They have to know what to expect from you each and every
day.
For me, consistency is tougher than certainty. I'm great at
setting the rules and communicating them to my kids. I'm not always so
great at fair and consistent application. But, I realize, easy or
difficult is not the issue -- appropriate or not appropriate is. So, my
wife and I constantly strive for consistency when we enforce the rules
in our house.
5. Be Immediate
Act now. When your children do something worthy of praise -- do
it now. When your children do something that needs correction -- do it
now. Delayed consequences have very little impact on behavior.
Let's look at our adult behaviors to illustrate the point. I
like cheesecake. Eating cheesecake offers me both immediate and future
consequences. The future consequence is negative -- I could develop a
weight or blood pressure problem. The immediate consequence is positive
-- it tastes good and gives me pleasure. When I have the opportunity to
get cheesecake, I find it difficult to resist. Why? The immediate,
certain positive tends to overshadow the future, possible negative.
The definition of immediate can change depending on your
child's age. For example, your ten-year old might respond to a
disciplinary action that happens 15 minutes after the event. With a
four-year old, you had better correct the behavior on the spot -- even
if other people are around. To a four-year old, 15 minutes is a virtual
eternity.
Acting immediately has an added benefit for you when the
behavior is inappropriate. If it continues without correction, you are
likely to get angrier every time you see it. As you get angrier, you
will probably have more difficulty keeping your response proportional
to the behavior (i.e. - not blowing your stack). Act now and you'll
probably maintain control.
There you have it -- five simple principles to guide a wide range of parenting situations.
As I sit writing this article, I can think of times when I
haven't done it right. Nonetheless, I offer the 5 B's in an effort to
help all of us become better parents. Collecting my thoughts on this
topic reminds me of the right way to work with my children. Writing
them down helps me to stay on track.
Some or all of these ideas may be completely new to you -- but
maybe not. It's more likely that you've heard some of this information
before. Maybe not in exactly the same way, but you've heard it. If this
is new to you, I hope it helps you as a parent. If it's old-hat, I hope
it serves as a reminder to help you stay on track as well.
Guy Harris is a Recovering Engineer. His background includes service
as a US Navy Submarine Officer, functional management with major
multi-national corporations, and senior management in an international
chemical business. As an author, trainer, speaker, and coacn he helps
entrepreneurs, business managers, and other organizational leaders
improve team performance by applying the principles of human behavior.
Guy co-authored "The Behavior Bucks System(tm)" to help parents
reduce stress and conflict with their children by effectively applying
behavioral principles in the home. Learn more about this book at http://www.behaviorbucks.com.
Learn more about Guy at http://www.principledriven.com.
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