Monday, 13 December 2010

Your Attention is Your Biggest Reward

Here is a great parenting article sent to my by Tom Dozier,
Behaviorist, Parenting Skills Trainer, and Parenting Coach
Your attention is one of the biggest "payoffs" you can give to your
children for their behavior.  This is both good and bad.  When
children behave in appropriate ways, we sometimes give them
attention, and the attention is a reward that causes them behave
that way more often. When children behave inappropriately, we are
more likely to pay attention to them, and we do this with our
words, touch, time, and emotions.  This often takes the form of
correcting, scolding, nagging, having logical discussions,
arguing, questioning, threatening, etc.

Unfortunately, the research in human behavior clearly shows that
this attention is reinforcing or rewarding the very behavior we
want to eliminate. Since parents are about 4 to 5 times more likely
to respond to an inappropriate behavior than to an appropriate
behavior, we often get in the trap of rewarding and building the
very behaviors that annoy and bug us so much.

One great skill for dealing with inappropriate behavior is to give
your attention to another child until the first child starts behaving
appropriately.  A mom I was working with told me that as she
arrived home from work, she declared to her 7 and 9 year old kids,
"Hey kids, lets go to the mall tonight and do some Christmas
shopping.  As soon as you get your homework done, we can go." The
9 year old piped back, "I'm not doing my homework.  I hate
homework!"  Calmly, the mom said, "Well, son, that is up to you,
but you will have to deal with your teachers."

She then turned to her 7 year old and said, "What is your homework
tonight?"  The 7 year old pulled out her books and mom talked to
her and watched her start her homework."  In a few minutes, she
noticed that the 9 year old had started his homework at the other
end of the kitchen table. She walked over, patted the boy on his
shoulder and said, "Thanks for getting started on your homework."

What the mom did was to withhold her attention to the inappropriate
behavior of refusing to start homework.  She could have had a long
discussion about the importance of a good education, or tried to
coax the 9 year old into doing his homework.  She could have raised
her voice and demanded that he start, or she could have done any of
a number of other responses that would have given more of her words,
touch, time and emotion to the inappropriate behavior. Although any
of these may have gotten the child to start his homework, it would
have been rewarding and building the "complaining about homework"
behavior she disliked.

Also note that once the 9 year old started the appropriate
behavior, the mom walked over and acknowledged the behavior without
any mention of the inappropriate behavior.  This is very important
in the long run as it rewards and builds the appropriate behavior.

One important note for teenagers is that you must be very subtle.
If a 14 year old complains about doing homework, and you walk over
to the 11 year old and tell the child how much you appreciate him/her
doing the homework, the 14 year old may just yell, "Hey, I hear
you.  I know who you are really talking to.  If you want to talk to
me about homework, talk to me and not him!"

Ignoring junk behavior (behavior that does not hurt, damage, or
destroy) can be one of your best parenting tools.  Try it, you will
be amazed. If you have some questions about how to apply this
skill, or have a good story to share, please give me a call or send
me an email.

I would love to hear from you, and there is no charge.

Tom Dozier
Behaviorist, Parenting Skills Trainer, and Parenting Coach

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