Posted on 08/02/2006 1:51:31 PM PDT by stainlessbanner
One of the great ironies of our time is that todays parents, with more professional resources at their disposal than ever before, are experiencing more and greater problems in the area of discipline than their grandparents even thought possible. Once upon a not-so-very-long-ago time, children were mischievous. They tried to get away with what they thought they could when adults werent looking. All too many of todays kids are surly, rude, disrespectful, ill-mannered, petulant, and openly defiant.
The nature of the child has not changed in fifty years, so the problem must lie with changes in how parents are going about their job. Indeed, todays parenting bears little resemblance to the child rearing of fifty-plus years ago. Even if one overlooks such things as working moms, day care, and the ubiquity of the single parent family, the differences between then and now are considerable.
In the good old days (and make no mistake about it, while certainly not idyllic, they were far better), parents concentrated their energies on shaping character. They were intent upon raising children who embodied the Three Rs of respect, responsibility, and resourcefulness. Todays parents, by contrast, seek to raise children who possess high self-esteem, which researchers have found is correlated highly with low tolerance for frustration, low self-control, and a sense of personal entitlement. Be careful what you wish for, eh?
Yesterdays parents valued good manners. Todays parents value skills and accomplishments, especially academic. Along with many if not most of my peers, I entered first grade not knowing my ABCs. My first grade teacher taught fifty children. She had far fewer discipline problems than a first grade teacher today who, with an aide, teaches twenty. Furthermore, those fifty kidsnone of whom were held back because of late birthdaysexited first grade reading better than todays first grade grads, many of whom knew their ABCs before their fourth birthdays.
Yesterdays parents didnt much care what grades their kids brought home as long as the grades reflected their childrens best efforts. Mothers didnt help their children with homework, nor did they challenge teachers who reported misbehavior. If a child misbehaved in school, the teachers report was accepted, and the child got into double trouble at home. But then yesterdays parents understood that one could not be a good enough parent to prevent ones child from behaving despicably on any given day. Todays parents seem to think that despicable behavior reflects bad parenting; therefore, todays kids are incapable of behaving despicably.
In those better days, when you misbehaved, your parents tried to make you feel guilty. Many of todays parents try to discipline their children without causing guilt, not realizing that the anticipation of guilt is the best preventive of misbehavior, not the anticipation of negative consequences. Most people in my generation will testify that knowing you disappointed your parents was the worst consequence of all. But then, we were not on pedestals. The pedestals were occupied by our parents. Needless to say, todays parents are more concerned about disappointing their kids than their kids are about disappointing them, if they are even concerned at all. Its that pedestal thing.
The bottom line: You cannot raise children in two entirely different ways and arrive at the same outcome. I sometimes ask parents, Who would you rather be raising, you or your child? Eight out of ten answer along these lines: Oh, thats a no-brainer, John. Me, of course.
Unfortunately, thats not the right answer.
Today little Johnny is just expressing himself. In years gone by, Mama expressed herself with the back of her hand and little Johnny behaved.
Foolishness is within the heart of a child, but the rod of correction will drive it FAR FROM HIM.
Little less talk and alot more action
"Yesterdays parents valued good manners."
This is one of the most valuable disciplines as it leads to many other good attributes that can be taught...
You have no idea how much I despise that "stop it or else" mentality that some parents have. An empty threat (because they never actually do carry through, until WAAAY past the line) just undermines their own authority... and then they wonder why their "or elses" never have any effect on their kids.
Yep, my mother had a wooden paddle about 1/2" thick that had the phrase "Mother's golden rule" painted on it.
Now I use a thick wooden spoon on my boys or just take away things that matter most to them (i.e. video games, phone and TV priveledges)
One other thing about "yesteryear" - kids weren't taught in school that if they got a whippin at home they could call 911 and report abuse. When my kids say they're gonna call for abuse my reply is always "go ahead, I'm ready for a vacation, so please, call, and hurry up about it too." Gets them every time. :-)
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