articlehalls.com articlehalls.com articlehalls.com
Index Page About Us Security & Privacy ToS Add Your Link Submit Article
Search:   

 

Computers & Software

 

Companies & Business

 

People & Society

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Self Help

 

Tour & Travel

 

Garden & Home

 

Games & Play

 

Jobs & Careers

 

Research & Science

 

Culture & Art

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Academics & Learning

 

News & Events

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Malls & Shopping

 

Entertainment

 

Children & Teens

 

Government & Politics

 

Banking & Finance

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Fitness & Health

 

Property & Agents

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Index Page › Garden & Home › Parenting
 

Discipline: How Parents Reinforce Misbehavior

 
Author: Jean Tracy

How would you feel if a parent giggled when her child spoke rudely to you? Would you wonder if that parent had a screw loose? It happened to me.

Case in point, I remember a mother and her 10-year-old daughter's first counseling session. I had never met them before. The daughter glared at me and yelled, "I'm going to kill you!" For once, I was speechless.

In my 22 years of family counseling, no child had ever threatened me or yelled at me. Her mother's response shocked me even more. She giggled. That's right. She giggled. This girl had just crossed the line from respect to disrespect. So did her mother's giggles.

Listen. Being positive is good. Being too positive is looney. Why would any parent choose to minimize negative behavior? Why would any parent reinforce disrespect? Why would any parent giggle?

I suspect that parents who act too positive when their kids misbehave are embarrassed by their kid's behavior. Here are three possible reasons why some parents giggle, praise, or make excuses when their kids misbehave:

They want you to minimize their kid's behavior too.
They fear you'll think badly of their child.
They hope you'll think the misbehavior is not so bad.

Will you be fooled by giggles and excuses? Will you think that calling you a vulgar name is really OK? Do you understand what this means for you? What if you are that giggling parent?

If you are too positive you'll:

Minimize rude behavior.
Exaggerate good behavior.
Sound phony when you praise.

Children know when you minimize. Children know when you exaggerate. Children know when you are wrong.

Making excuses, giggling, or ignoring your child's misbehavior destroys your natural authority to guide and train your kids. Without that authority, you'll end up raising monsters.

Destroying your own authority increases the likelihood of:

Reinforcing negative behaviors.
Upsetting everyone around you.
Assuring that everyone dislikes your kids.
Assuring that everyone disrespects you and your parenting skills.
Being disrespected by your kids.

Avoid being looney. Be positive with your kids but never too positive. Be kind when disciplining but never too kind. Be balanced. Discipline with kindness and firmness. If you do, you won't be reinforcing misbehavior. You'll be disciplining just right. You'll be building character too."

Author Bio:

Jean Tracy

Jean Tracy, MSS "Granny Jean" helps parents, teachers and counselors, raise awesome kids with solid characters. She graduated from Seattle University with a degree in education. She taught elementary school in Washington, California, and Connecticut.

Inspired by her desire to help the problem children in her classes, Jean returned to graduate school. She earned a Masters Degree in Social Work from Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. Upon returning to her home in Washington State, she worked as a probation officer and then developed a private counseling practice with families and children that spanned 22 years. During this time she earned a Diplomate in Clinical Social Work.

When asked how she developed her parenting books and products, she tells a unique story. "When I was an intern counselor in an old elementary school in Pennsylvania, I shared my office with the janitor under the stairwell. When the bell rang, the children's pounding footsteps drowned out every counseling session I ever had. The office itself had buckets, mops, and assorted cans lining the walls. The light bulb overhead swung back and forth casting creepy shadows everywhere. My counseling tools were broken down toys in a huge vinyl bag. Those toys never seemed a good way to counsel kids.

When I started my counseling practice, I looked for better skills to understand the kids I counseled. Over the years I developed fun ways to communicate with kids, to help parents help their own kids, and build character too. My unique parenting books and products are the result."

Jean Tracy, "Granny Jean" is a wife, mother, and grandmother. She is also an award-winning Distinguished Toastmaster and professional speaker. Her presentations, include:

1. Build Character Now! Practical Tools for Busy Parents 2. Discipline Styles, 3 to Lose and 1 to Choose 3. Family Meetings: This Special Formula Builds Character 4. Teach Your Child Success! 1 Simple Formula, 3 Easy Steps

Granny Jean's presentations are full of stories and interactive activities that will help you as parents, teachers, and counselors build solid character in your awesome children.

You can search for this article using: single parenting, parenting advice, parenting information, teen parenting, parenting tips
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
What Makes an Aeroplane Fly?
 
Adding Scent And Color When Making Candles
 
Creating Rubber Stamps: Not All Methods Created Equal (Part 3 of 3)
 
Pergo Floors - Pick Model Right for You
 
Thanksgiving-What It Means to Me
 
5 Commands You Should Teach Your Dog
 
10 Ways To Make Reading Fun
 
Organziation Tip - Getting Kids to Clean Rooms
 
Nannies, Grannies, and the Ontario Fire Code: What Realtors Need to Know About Retrofit Section 9.8
 
Stamped Concrete Sealer
 
 
 
Index Page :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlehalls.com