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Parenting
How much should we correct children’s poor behavior?
by Michael Grose
November 16, 2005
“If I have told you once I have told you a thousand times
put your dishes in the dishwasher, not in the sink.”
I suspect a variation of this comment is played out in one
form or another in homes around the world as parents
continually correct children’s poor behaviors and annoying
habits.
How much do you keep picking up on children’s poor behavior?
Well, it depends on the type of behavior, the child and your
levels of tolerance.
I am a firm believer that the more adults reminds a child
verbally about a behavior the more they assume
responsibility for it. Also constant reminders about
behavior tend to encourage parent deafness in children. They
generally tune out when we drone on. Better to burn your
favorite reminders, lectures and morality tales on CD and
give it to them to listen at their leisure if you must have
your say!
Action rather than reminders tends to change children’s
behavior. I am not suggesting that you take offensive action
every time a dish is left on a table, a child interrupts you
in public or whatever your child’s annoying habit maybe. But
do something different if your words don’t have an affect.
Be a little less cooperative than normal. Ban whatever it is
they may misuse. Take kids who misbehave in public home. Do
whatever it takes in a reasonable way to impress on children
that you are serious.
Of course, some children’s annoying or uncooperative
behaviors don’t matter in the long term. I recall one mother
who was at her wit’s end about the untidiness of
ten-year-old’s bedroom. It became a constant battle of wills
as mum nagged about the state of the floor, walls and the
unmade bed. He daughter just dug her heals in and refused to
budge. Standoff at the OK Corale if ever I saw it. In fact,
I suspect for this mother the dispute was less about the
bedroom and more about ‘I want to make you’. The bedroom had
just become a handy battlefield and the child held all the
aces.
The child was doing well at school, was generally well
adjusted and well behaved. It was just that her bedroom
looked like a war zone. But her mother couldn’t see past the
bedroom for the positive stuff. Like many parents she was so
close to her the situation that she had lost perspective and
couldn’t see that in the long-term scheme of things a messy
bedroom was small beer.
Typically, the girl’s father couldn’t see what the fuss was
about. He just closed the bedroom door so he didn’t have to
see it. Problem solved for him.
Some behaviors need to be picked up on. If you have a
teenager then it seems that one way you show you care is by
being like Attila the Hun and reminding them for the
thousandth time that homework needs to be done before the
television goes on. Some kids have so much going on in their
lives that the very basic stuff of finishing a task or
tidying up is irrelevant to them.
It is necessary to be sure about which behaviors are worth
picking up on and which ones parents should let go.
Otherwise, all some children will hear at home are constant
reminders of “Do this ..., don’t do that ..., I’ve told you
before ...” And their eyes will get that familiar glaze as
they tune out and parent deafness sets in.
As always for parents it is a matter of being sparing with
your criticism of children and smart about the battles you
choose to enter.
By arrangement with
Parenting Ideas
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Parenting
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