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limits &
consequences
In today’s pursuit of having confident
children who believe they can achieve whatever they want, many
parents overlook their responsibility to set limits for their
children. Ironically, children who don’t learn limits do not
develop the sense of security and self-esteem they need to
achieve important life goals. One of the most challenging but
fundamentally important principles of parenting is the ability
to set limits for children and follow through with consequences
when the boundaries have been crossed. Limits and boundaries
provide children with a feeling of safety and love. Confidence
develops when children know that their parents are looking out
for them. When you set a limit like telling your child to keep
his hands away from the stove, you set that limit out of love
because you do not want your child to burn himself.
Limits and
consequences are also a vital tool in behavior management.
Limits are set to help your child to understand respect for
himself and the world around him. The purpose of using
consequences is to motivate children to make responsible
decisions, not to force their submission. Consequences are
effective only if you avoid having hidden motives of winning and
controlling your child. Try not to establish rules solely for your
convenience and always make sure you have realistic expectations. A child must have
the cognitive capacity to understand the rules and the
consequences for breaking the rules before the consequence is
given. For example, an 18-month old child does not understand
that he can get burnt from touching the stove. If he does not
understand, he can’t be held responsible and should not receive
a consequence. Instead, a parent can use distraction techniques
or can arrange the environment to secure safety, such as putting
up a safety gate when the stove is hot.
Consistency and
follow-through are key when using limits and consequences to
change a problematic behavior. If a limit has been established
and been broken, a parent needs to follow through with a
consequence. Any flexibility will teach the child what he can
get away with in the future. In other words, mean what you say.
It will help you to
set reasonable limits if you remember that your child needs
freedom to explore, to learn and to discover. The right of
children to play freely and to learn by doing things themselves
must be recognized.
Here are some
important guidelines when setting limits and consequences:
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The person whose
rules were broken is responsible for enforcing and
administering the consequence whenever possible. For
example, school rules should be enforced at school by the
teacher.
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One consequence
per violation should be enforced.
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Be both firm and
kind. Firmness refers to your follow through with the limit
and consequence. Kindness refers to the manner in which you
present the choice. A consequence should not be perceived as
a punishment if it is to deter the behavior in the future.
Be firm with the problem; be kind with your child.
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Consequences
should be over as quickly as possible so a positive family
atmosphere can be reestablished.
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Whenever
possible, offer you child the chance for a do-over before
enforcing a consequence. Give the child another chance to
practice an appropriate behavior and be successful.
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Follow through
with consequences as soon after the violation as possible so
the child connects the consequence with his/her action.
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Be in control of
yourself when administering or enforcing consequences. Any
show of anger and frustration, such as yelling, name
calling, criticizing or rage by the parent, cancels the
effect of the consequence. Remember: it is you AND your
child against the problem, not you against your child.
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Be patient. It
will take time for the consequences to be effective.
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If you make the
child feel bad, he’ll hold on to the behavior as part of his
arsenal against the parent and this will not foster a
parent-child alliance against the problem behavior.
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Consequences must
be planned in advance. You should be prepared with a list of
consequences you can call upon when the situation arises.
Both parents should agree in advance what is an appropriate
consequence.
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Choose
consequences related to the violation, whenever possible.
For example, if your child exhibits antisocial behavior,
sending him to his room is a logical consequence (not as a
punishment). If he’s disrupting the rest of the family,
logically he needs to leave the room so as not to disturb
the rest.
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Make sure the
consequences you choose do not negatively affect you or the
rest of the family more so than the child receiving the
consequence. For example, limiting TV or cancelling a
weekend outing may affect you and other siblings.
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When you must use
consequences as a method of behavior management, think of it
as helping your child to get back in control, and teaching
him important life skills such as patience, respect for
others etc.
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THROUGH BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT!
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