Most parents interpret discipline as punishment or implementing sanctions. Not true. The very best discipline is education. Be your child’s coach. Consult Jim Fey’s CDs.
Most parents interpret discipline as punishment or implementing sanctions. Not true. The very best discipline is education. Be your child’s coach. Consult Jim Fey’s CDs.
This entry was posted on Saturday, November 21st, 2009 and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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#1 by Singinganddancing on November 21st, 2009
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I like Thomas Phelan’s methods outlined in his book 1-2-3 Magic. I also like the approach of Dr. Haim Ginott as described by his students, Adele Faber and Elaine Mazlish in How to Talk so Kids Will Listen and Listen so Kids Will Talk.
The first is behavioral, the second linguistic and encourages emotional intelligence. Together, I think they’re all you need.
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Mother and psychologist.
#2 by lindy h on November 21st, 2009
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Depends on age, toddlers – making them sit in one spot for the amount of minutes by age
Older kids – time out in their rooms
Pre-teens take away what they like maybe a computer game or the tv or the computer
and teens grounding them normally does the job or driving privleges will teach them
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#3 by La_Serena on November 21st, 2009
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Leading by example. Patience, persistence.
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#4 by Trying2BNice on November 21st, 2009
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Most parents interpret discipline as punishment or implementing sanctions. Not true. The very best discipline is education. Be your child’s coach. Consult Jim Fey’s CDs.
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#5 by pandabear on November 21st, 2009
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Be consistent. There is no best method for every child. Every situation is different and every child is different. What works today, may not work next week.
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#6 by Emmy on November 21st, 2009
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Lots of love and good role models. Also a predictable enviorment.
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