10 tools to better child’s behavior now
Friday, April 17th, 2009    Subscribe To Our Feed
Let’s face it! Parenting is definitely not an easy job. Especially if your kid is troubled behaviorally. Many parents want to change their child and ended up frustrated due to the lack of results. It’s very important to understand that we cannot change our kid’s behavior until we are able to teach them the skills they need to be accountable for their behaviors.
Here are 10 tools that I like to share with you and hopefully you will find it less stressful whenever your child is getting on your nerves. These are mere extracts of the total 27 tools in one of the lesson, that you will find in The Total Transformation Program by James Lehman.
1) Use direct statements
You need to be firm, clear and direct when you are dealing with a child’s bad behavior. Do not give rooms for negotiation. This will only encourage him for future misbehaviors.
2) Stop the show
If you find that your child is misbehaving badly or exhibiting tantrums, say in a public place, then stop whatever programs that you’ve planned for the day and go home. I understand that this can be tough. Especially when you have already some plans for the day. If your child continues his misbehavior, he will have to understand that there will not be anything he can look forward to for the rest of the day, until he stops his bad behavior.
3) Use consequences to get honesty
Take lying for example. If you child is lying then you need to set some consequences for the action. Ignoring it will only show your child that its ok to lie.
4) Be clear about your values
Communicate to your kids about your family values. It’s always easy for a child to understand values if this is ingrain into them at an early age. Start early. For those who are homeschooling your kids, you may have more contact time with your kids to impart values to them. The key is consistency. If your child is no longer at a young and teachable age, don’t give up. It’s still not too late. Your child will learn by imitating you. Do not just talk about values, show them how you embrace those values as well.
5) Identify Thinking Errors and Excuses
How many times has your child come up with excuses to justify his bad behavior ? Don’t argue over those excuses. Focus on the processes of their excuse, NOT their excuses!
6) Use Single-Issue Focus
Keep focus on the issue. Always address unrelated subjects at a later time.
7) Cueing
This is the single most effective method that I have used on my kids. Try to establish non verbal cue between you and your child. This can be very helpful if you are in a public place and a stare at him and communicate the message that he is in trouble if he continues misbehaving.
8) Use strategic recognition and affection
Give your kid credit when he does something right. Let him know that you recognize his efforts.
9) Give basic direction
I know this sounds simple. But sometimes we parents forget that our kids are still kids and that they need basic instructions for certain tasks. Give them a head start and then show them how to do things.
10) Demand and expect compliance
Parents need to know why their kid has to comply. Compliance is not submission without an understanding of why. Parents will need to understand why they want their child to be compliant. Is it just out of anger? Or you want your kid to learn certain truths.
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