![]() ![]() |
|||||||||||
| Rising Sun Psychotherapy & Nuevo Amanecer |
| Michele Boudreau,
PhD, MFT, LMHC |
Child-Rearing Beliefs
Child-Rearing Beliefs Checklist
Directions: Mark statements with which you agree. Compare your answers
with anyone who is helping you raise your child. Discuss answers that differ
to reach an understanding.
Using Power Wisely
When parents lecture, nag, plead, or yell, they upset themselves and
delay taking action that corrects misbehavior.
Parents need to make the final decision in areas of children’s lives
that affect others or threaten safety. But, they need to allow children
“free will” in areas of interests, beliefs, and style.
Children do not have to be punished for behavior that affects only
themselves and can be given a natural consequence such as doing
their own laundry when clothes are not put away.
Incentives That Require Cooperation
Withholding all privileges until children do as they are asked is a
better motivator than taking away privileges to punish a child for not
cooperating.
It is more effective to set a deadline for starting a chore or task than
to ask a child to do something immediately.
Actions That Encourage Obedience
Punishments should be designed to teach good conduct rather than
to cause distress or prevent mistakes from ever happening.
Punishments need to be intense enough to upset children but brief
enough to provide opportunities to show changes in past behavior.
Consistently repeating the same punishment is better than one long
punishment.
One minute per year of age is a useful guideline for the length of
time-out.
Children should be told how long a restriction will last and can be
given a task that shows they have learned from past actions to
shorten the length of the restriction.
Spankings require parents to be active while the child is passive.
Withholding privileges until a task is performed, time-out, essays, or
restrictions require children to comply.
Daily Routines, School Problems, and Moral Matters
After demonstrating that they know how to keep their rooms neat,
teenagers can be allowed some leeway on bedroom cleanliness.
When children lie, punishments should be limited to wrongdoing and
to help them identify the causes of dishonesty (avoiding
punishments, disapproval, rules, or looking bad).
Children who are making poor grades do not have to be restricted for
a whole grading period if they bring home school reports showing
satisfactory progress.
Responses That Reduce Anger, Bad Attitudes, and Back Talk
It is acceptable for children to express frustration with rules and
consequences by making faces, pouting, crying, or complaining.
(Cross out any that you won’t tolerate.)
Suppressing a child’s frustrations makes them build up. Sympathizing
with a child’s frustrations reduces them and will not undermine
punishments as long as parents remain firm.
Parents should give children a reason for their decisions but do not
need to make them understand the reason.
Children do not need to understand their parents’ point of view and
may not be able to do so until they have followed a rule consistently.
Parents can best fulfill their need for understanding by talking to
other adults, not by trying to convince their children.
Parents need to understand their children’s point of view to make
good decisions.