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So youre trying to make your child quit bullyingor lying or cheating or defying you or taking backand youre having little success. Youve tried threatening, scolding and even begging, but nothing seems to work. Frankly, youre at your wits end. How can you ensure that your child stops his bad behavior for good? The first thing you must do is re-think your approach to discipline.
Behavior is learned, so it can be unlearned. Parents need a specific makeover plan designed to half their kids bad behavior. But before you can implement such a plan, you must first understand what youre doing wrongand why its wrong.
Common discipline mistakes:
1. Thinking Its just a phase. Bad behaviors dont go away. They almost always need parental intervention. The longer parents wait, the more likely the behavior will become a habit. So dont call it a phase: stop the bad behavior as soon as it starts.
2. Being a poor behavior model. Our behavior has an enormous influence on our kids behavior. After all, what they see is what they copy. So before parents start planning to change their kids behavior, they need to take a serious look at their own.
3. Not targeting the bad behavior. Its best to work on improving only oneand never more than twobehaviors at a time. And the more specific the plan the better. Dont say, Hes not behaving. Instead, narrow the focus to target the specific behavior you want to eliminate: Hes talking back. And makeover will be more successful.
4. No plan to stop the bad behavior. Once parents have identified the bad behavior, they need a solid makeover plan to stop it. The plan must (1) address the kids bad behavior, (2) state exactly how to correct it, (3) identify the new behavior to replace it, and (4) have a set consequence if the bad behavior continues.
5. Not teaching a substitute behavior. No behavior will change permanently unless the child is taught a new behavior to replace it. Think about it: if you tell a kid to stop doing one behavior, what will he do instead? Without a substitute behavior, chances are the child will revert to using the old misbehavior.
6. Going alone. Big mistake! After all if your kid is using the bad behavior on other caregiversbe it spouse, grandparents, teachers, day care providers, coaches, scout leaders, babysittersthen use the same makeover plan together. The more you work together, the quicker youll be in stopping the problem behavior.
7. Not sticking to the plan long enough. Learning new behavior habits generally takes a minimum of twentyone days of repetition. Parents need to commit to changing the bad behavior and then continue using the plan for at least three weeks. Only then will they see change.
Michele Borba, Ed.D. is an internationally renowned educational consultant and recipient of the National Educator Award. She is the author of 19 books including No More MisBehavin; 39 Difficult Behaviors and How to Stop Them and Building Moral Intelligence, chosen by Publishers Weeklys list of most noteworthy for 2001. Her latest book is Don't Give Me That Attitude! 24 Things Kids Do and How to Stop Them. She is a frequent guest expert on TV and NPR talk shows including Fox & Friends, The View, Jenny Jones, and serves on honorary board to Parents. For more information about her work check out www.moralintelligence.com.
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