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Home > Safe Children and Healthy Families are a Shared Responsibility: 2006 Community Resource Packet > The Power of Choice The Power of Choice
Would you like to get your kids to willingly cooperate? Stop the daily battles? Teach your kids valuable life skills? If your answer is "Yes! Yes! Yes!" then read on There are so many things we must get our children to do and so many things we must stop them from doing! Get up. Get dressed. Don't dawdle. Do your homework. Eat. It goes on and on. We can get our kids to cooperate and at the same time allow them to learn self-discipline and develop good decision-making skills. How? By offering choices. Giving a choice is a very powerful tool that can be used with children who are toddlers and children who are teenagers. Using choice is an effective way to achieve results, and when you get in the habit of offering choices you are doing your children a big favor. As children learn to make simple choices—Milk or juice?—they get the practice required to make bigger choices—Buy two class T-shirts or one sweatshirt?—which gives them the ability as they grow to make more important decisions—Save or spend? Drink beer or soda? Study or fail? Giving children choices allows them to learn to listen to their inner voice. It is a valuable skill that they will carry with them to adulthood. You should offer choices based on your child's age and your intent.
A typical problem with choices is the child who makes up his own choice! If your child is still reluctant to choose from the options that you offer, then simply ask, "Would you like to choose or shall I choose for you?" If an appropriate answer is not forthcoming then you can say, "I see that you want me to choose for you." Then follow through. Make your choice and help your child—by leading or carrying him—so that he can cooperate. Excerpted with permission by New Harbinger Publications, Inc. (www.newharbinger.com) from Kid Cooperation: How to Stop Yelling, Nagging and Pleading and Get Kids to Cooperate by Elizabeth Pantley (www.pantley.com/elizabeth, copyright 1996). The above is an excerpt from Safe Children and Healthy Families Are a Shared Responsibility: |
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