Positive Discipline Guidelines
From Positive Discipline
by Jane Nelson
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Misbehaving children are “discouraged children” who have mistaken ideas
on how to achieve their primary goal – to belong. Their mistaken ideas
lead them to misbehavior. We cannot be effective unless we address the
mistaken beliefs rather than just the misbehavior.
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Use encouragement to help children fell “belonging” so the motivation for
misbehaving will be eliminated. Celebrate each step in the direction of
improvement rather than focusing on mistakes.
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A great way to help children feel encouraged is to spend special time “being
with them”. Many teachers have noticed a dramatic change in a “problem
child” after spending five minutes simply sharing what they both like and
do for fun.
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When tucking children into bed, ask them to share with you their “saddest
time” during the day and their “happiest time” during the day. Then you
share with them. You will be surprised what you learn.
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Have family meetings or class meetings to solve problems with cooperation
and mutual respect. This is the key to creating a loving, respectful atmosphere
while helping children develop self-discipline, responsibility, cooperation,
and problem-solving skills.
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Give children meaningful jobs. In the name of expediency, many parents
and teachers do things that children could do for themselves and one another.
Children feel belonging when they know they can make a real contribution.
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Decide together what jobs nee to be done. Put them all in a jar and let
each child draw out a few each week; that way no one is stuck with the
same jobs all the time. Teachers can invite children to help them
make class rules and list them on a chart titled, “We decided:”. Children
have ownership, motivation, and enthusiasm when they are included in the
decisions.
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Take time for training. Make sure that children understand what “clean
the kitchen” means to you. To them it may mean simply putting the dishes
in the sink. Parents and teachers may ask, “What is your understanding
of what is expected?”
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Teach and model mutual respect. One way is to be kid and firm at the same
time – kind to show respect for the child, and firm to show respect for
yourself and “the needs of the situation.” This is difficult during conflict,
so use the next guideline whenever you can.
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Proper timing will improve your effectiveness tenfold. It does not “work”
to deal with a problem at the time of conflict – emotions get in the way.
Teach children about cooling-off periods. You (or the children) can go
to a separate room and do something to make yourself feel better – and
then work on the problem with mutual respect.
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Get rid of the crazy idea that in order to make children do better, first
you have to make them feel worse. Do you feel like doing better when you
feel humiliated? This suggests a whole new look at “time out”.
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Use Positive Time Out. Let you children help you design a pleasant area
(cushions, books, music, stuffed animals) that will help the feel better.
Remember that children do better when they feel better. Then you can ask
your children, when they are upset, “Do you think it would help you to
take some positive time out?”
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Punishment may “work” if all you are interested in is stopping misbehavior
for “the moment.” Sometimes we must beware of what works when the long-range
results are negative – resentment, rebellion, revenge, or retreat.
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Teach children that mistakes are wonderful opportunities to learn! A great
way to teach children that mistakes are wonderful opportunities to learn
is to model that yourself by using the Three Rs of Recovery after you have
made a mistake: (1) Recognize your mistake. (2) Reconcile: Be willing to
say “I’m sorry, I didn’t like the way I handled that.” (3) Resolve: Focus
on solutions rather than blame. (#3 is effective only if you do #1 and
#2 first.)
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Focus on solutions instead of consequences. Many parents and teachers try
to disguise punishment by calling it a logical consequence. Get children
involved in finding solutions that are (1) related, (2) respectful, and
(3) reasonable.
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Make sure the message of love and respect gets through. Start with “I care
about you. I am concerned about this situation. Will you work with me on
a solution?”
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Have fun! Bring joy into homes and classrooms.
For information on lectures, seminars, conference keynotes, and
workshops with Jane Nelson, call (800) 879-0812