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Ten
Basic Principles of Good Parenting
There Is A Science To Raising Children
Are
you constantly searching the latest on parenting to make sure
you are doing everything exactly right? It's time to relax. Temple
University psychologist, Laurence Steinberg, says that perfect
parents just dont exist.
Most
parents are pretty good parents, says Steinberg, But
Ive never met a parent who is perfect 100 percent of the
time. We all can improve our batting average.
Sports analogies
are useful to Steinberg, the concept of the book came from his
own desire to improve his golf game. I was reading, probably
for the 10th time, Harvey Penicks Little Red Golf Book,
he says. It is built around a series of very short essays
that cover very basic principles.
As I
was reading it, I was thinking that this might be a good way to
teach people how to be better parents. Steinberg,
the Distinguished University Professor and the Laura Carnell Professor
of Psychology at Temple, wrote the newly released The Ten Basic
Principles of Good Parenting (Simon & Schuster). This
easy to follow how-to book uses the formula that works for golf
to improve parenting. He believes it is the perfect format for
today's busy parents.
Here is a
quick overview of the Ten Basic Principles:
1. What
you do matters.
Tell yourself that every day. How you treat and respond
to your child should come from a knowledgeable, deliberate sense
of what you want to accomplish. Always ask yourself: What effect
will my decision have on my child?
2. You
cannot be too loving.
When it comes to genuine expressions of warmth and affection,
you cannot love your child too much. It is simply not possible
to spoil a child with love. What we often think of as the product
of spoiling a child is never the result of showing a child too
much love. It is usually the consequence of giving a child things
in place of lovethings like leniency, lowered expectations
or material possessions.
3. Be involved
in your childs life.
"Being an involved parent takes time and is hard work, and
it often means rethinking and rearranging your priorities. It
frequently means sacrificing what you want to do for what your
child needs you to do. Be there mentally as well as physically.
4. Adapt
your parenting to fit your child.
Make sure your parenting keeps pace with your childs
development. You may wish you could slow down or freeze-frame
your childs life, but this is the last thing he wants. You
may be fighting getting older, but all he wants is to grow up.
The same drive for independence that is making your three-year-old
say no all the time is whats motivating him
to be toilet trained. The same intellectual growth spurt that
is making your 13-year-old curious and inquisitive in the classroom
also is making her argumentative at the dinner table.
5. Establish
and set rules.
If you dont manage your childs behavior when
he is young, he will have a hard time learning how to manage himself
when he is older and you arent around. Any time of the day
or night, you should always be able to answer these three questions:
Where is my child? Who is with my child? What is my child doing?
The rules your child has learned from you are going to shape the
rules he applies to himself.
6. Foster
your childs independence.
Setting limits helps your child develop a sense of self-control.
Encouraging independence helps her develop a sense of self-direction.
To be successful in life, shes going to need both. Accepting
that it is normal for children to push for autonomy is absolutely
key to effective parenting. Many parents mistakenly equate their
childs independence with rebelliousness or disobedience.
Children push for independence because it is part of human nature
to want to feel in control rather than to feel controlled by someone
else.
7. Be consistent.
If your rules vary from day to day in an unpredictable fashion,
or if you enforce them only intermittently, your childs
misbehavior is your fault, not his. Your most important disciplinary
tool is consistency. Identify your non-negotiables. The more your
authority is based on wisdom and not on power, the less your child
will challenge it.
8. Avoid
harsh discipline.
Of all the forms of punishment that parents use, the one
with the worst side effects is physical punishment. Children who
are spanked, hit or slapped are more prone to fighting with other
children. They are more likely to be bullies and more likely to
use aggression to solve disputes with others.
9. Explain
your rules and decisions.
Good parents have expectations they want their child to
live up to. Generally, parents overexplain to young children and
underexplain to adolescents. What is obvious to you may not be
evident to a 12-year-old. He doesnt have the priorities,
judgment or experience that you have.
10. Treat
your child with respect.
The best way to get respectful treatment from your child
is to treat him respectfully. You should give your child the same
courtesies you would give to anyone else. Speak to him politely.
Respect his opinion. Pay attention when he is speaking to you.
Treat him kindly. Try to please him when you can. Children treat
others the way their parents treat them. Your relationship with
your child is the foundation for her relationships with others.
There is no
guarantee that following these guidelines will result in perfect
parents... remember, there is no such thing!
Raising
children is not something we think of as especially scientific,
says Steinberg. But parenting is one of the most well-researched
areas in the entire field of social science. It has been studied
for 75 years, and the findings have remained remarkably consistent
over time."
The
advice in the book is based on what scientists who study parenting
have learned from decades of systematic research involving hundreds
of thousands of families. What Ive done is to synthesize
and communicate what the experts have learned in a language that
non-experts can understand.
Good parenting,
says Steinberg, is parenting that fosters psychological
adjustmentelements like honesty, empathy, self-reliance,
kindness, cooperation, self-control and cheerfulness.
Good
parenting is parenting that helps children succeed in school,
he continues. It promotes the development of intellectual
curiosity, motivation to learn and desire to achieve. It deters
children from anti-social behavior, delinquency, and drug and
alcohol use. And good parenting is parenting that helps protect
children against the development of anxiety, depression, eating
disorders and other types of psychological distress.
There
is no more important job in any society than raising children,
and there is no more important influence on how children develop
than their parents.
Steinberg's
other books include You and Your Adolescent: A Parents
Guide for Ages 10 to 20 (HarperCollins, 1997), Crossing
Paths: How Your Childs Adolescence Triggers Your Own Crisis
(Simon & Schuster, 1994), and Beyond the Classroom: Why
School Reform Has Failed and What Parents Need to Do (Simon
& Schuster, 1996).
Source: Newswise/Temple
University
More about
good parenting around the Web:
Parenting
Tips - familydoctor.org
Parents
as Teachers
Weekly
Parenting Tips
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