Disciplining With Love
The Family: A Proclamation to the World
counsels parents to bring up
their children in love and righteousness. Among the greatest challenges parents
face is persuading children to comply and treating them with loving direction
when they don’t.
According to parenting scholars, parents use three major approaches to win
their children’s compliance: coercion, love withdrawal, and induction.
Parents who use coercion attempt to force their will on their child through
hostile or severely punitive means, such as yelling, ordering, hitting, or
demeaning. While such strategies often yield compliance, research shows that
parents who frequently use them produce children who lack social ability, are
withdrawn, lack spontaneity, are more aggressive, and have an underdeveloped
conscience.
Parents who use love withdrawal show disapproval and suspend their loving
attention until the behavior changes. For example, they might refuse to talk to
their child until she complies. Research on the effectiveness of this approach
shows mixed results, but they do indicate a child may suffer from excessive
guilt if frequently disciplined this way.
Induction includes reasoning with children and explaining the effects of their
behavior on others. It uses patience and gentle persuasion to encourage desired
behavior. Experts say induction is a far healthier form of discipline than
either coercion or love withdrawal. Parents who regularly use induction produce
children who have better-developed consciences and are more socially competent,
responsible, internally motivated to make good choices, independent, confident,
and achievement-oriented.
Sometimes, however, simple reasoning is not enough to win compliance. On these
occasions, parents may be tempted to yell, threaten, or ground their child.
Invoking consequences is a better alternative. When parents allow children to
experience the direct results of their choices, rather than shielding them from
these results, children learn for themselves that certain actions produce
certain outcomes. The emphasis is on teaching the child, not punishing him. For
example, a child who gets up late for school and misses the bus will learn an
important lesson if he has to walk to school rather than be driven by a parent.
A child who doesn’t pick up her dirty socks and put them in the hamper should
experience the direct result of her choice -- no clean socks to wear.
It’s important for parents to set up in advance the consequences that will
logically follow from a particular misbehavior. For example, a teen who breaks
curfew loses the use of the family car for a predetermined amount of time. A
child who goes to visit friends without telling Mom or Dad first loses the
privilege of spending time with friends for a time. When there isn’t a clear
connection between a misbehavior and a consequence, parents are likely
punishing rather than teaching.
In order for consequences to be effective, they must be given in the spirit of
guiding and teaching, say parenting scholars Wally Goddard and Larry Jensen.
Discipline should be delivered in the context of a love and tender concern for
a child’s long-term welfare. Parents should have a sincere interest in teaching
children correct principles and not see disciplining as an opportunity to vent
or take revenge. Parental authority should never be mistaken for the
opportunity to command or abuse. If we’re feeling like we want our children to
suffer “for their own good,” Goddard and Jensen say, we probably don’t have the
right spirit.
Some parents insist on harsh punishment or immediately assign consequences for
misbehavior. But parenting scholars Craig Hart and Lloyd Newell say it’s
important to understand the reasons behind a child’s misbehavior before
deciding on discipline. Sometimes a child behaves badly because of a disorder
that requires medical attention. Perhaps a child is acting out to gain
attention, meet an unfilled need, or express fear or worry. A teen might be
late getting home from an evening outing because he helped a stranded motorist.
Reacting with immediate punishment or assignment of consequences in these
situations would probably be counterproductive. Parents should sincerely try to
understand their children’s behavior rather than simply react to it. With
understanding, parents can provide more effective discipline and be better
teachers to their children. Full understanding of the circumstances surrounding
bad behavior can also help parents plan ahead to prevent potential problems
After being corrected, children often have a particularly strong need to feel
their parents’ love. Children need to know that they are still loved and
valued, even when they misbehave. Wise parents follow up discipline by assuring
children they are loved and cared for.
What about spanking? Although there is some mixed evidence on the results of
spanking, most experts agree other options are better. Spanking teens has
particularly negative outcomes, both for the teen and for the parent-teen
relationship. Better strategies include withdrawing privileges, giving time
out, providing opportunities to apologize and make amends, or imposing other
consequences.
In short, the best discipline style avoids harshness and minimizes reprimands.
It is a careful balance between reasonable strictness and unconditional love
and acceptance. Effective discipline is always delivered within the context of
a loving parent-child relationship.
Here are practical suggestions for disciplining with love:
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Calm down. Correct children when you’re calm and collected, not when
you’re frustrated and angry. If you catch yourself about to discipline with
anger, take a deep breath, stop, and count to 30. Or send your child to his
room and go to your own bedroom to compose yourself and think about the
situation.
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Strive to understand your child’s misbehavior before you discipline.
Is your daughter acting out because she is tired, restless, or anxious for
attention? Maybe a nap or some extra time with you would be more beneficial
than punishment. Is your son in a freedom-seeking stage of growth (typically
the two’s, three’s, and the teenage years)? What can you do to help him seek
independence safely and responsibly? Is something in the environment bothering
him? Perhaps he’s lost a favorite toy or he’s afraid of the dark or he
performed poorly on an exam. Maybe your child just didn’t know better. If so,
teach him rather than punish him.
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Use consequences. Consequences teach children how their actions affect
their own and others’ lives. Consequences work better than threats and nagging.
They’re especially effective if your children are included in deciding what
consequences should follow what misbehavior. For example:
Before children go out, many parents have a routine of asking the
Who-What-Where-When questions: Who are you going to be with? What you will be
doing? Where you will be? What time will you be home? They agree together on
the answers. Any changes in plans must be approved by a phone call. Otherwise
friend privileges are lost for a time.
Most parents assign their children chores, often with the expectation they’ll
be done before dinner. If they complain about doing their chores, they can be
asked to go to their rooms until they agree to comply. Otherwise they miss
dinner.
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Look for alternatives to spanking and physical punishment. Options
include withdrawing privileges (unsafe driving will result in not being allowed
to use the car for one week), emphasizing the damage or pain caused (“You made
your sister so sad when you called her that,” or “This has really damaged my
trust in you.”), and requiring restitution (apologizing, working to repair
damaged property or injured relationships).
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Continue to love. When discipline is given, make sure you follow it with
love and affection. Assure your children that even when you don’t like what
they do, you still love them. Express confidence in them (“We all make
mistakes. I know you’ll do better next time.”)
Written by Megan Northrup, Research Assistant, and Stephen F. Duncan,
Professor, School of Family Life, BrighamYoungUniversity.
References
Goddard, H. W., & Jensen, L. (2000). Understanding and applying
proclamation principles of parenting. In D. C. Dollahite (Ed.),
Strengthening
our families: An in-depth look at the proclamation on the family
(pp.
124-134). Salt Lake City, UT: Bookcraft.
Hart, C., & Newell, L. (2000). Proclamation-based principles of parenting
and supportive scholarship. In D. C. Dollahite (Ed.),
Strengthening our
families: An in-depth look at the proclamation on the family
(pp.
100-123). Salt Lake City, UT: Bookcraft.