17 Basic Principles Of Good Parent/Child Communication (from 4 years on)
by admin
September 3, 2014
Ability to effective communicate in any relationship is necessary for that relationship to be successful.
- Let the child know that you are interested and involved and that you will help when needed.
- Turn off the television or put the newspaper down when your child wants to converse.
- Avoid taking a telephone call when the child has something important to tell you.
- Unless other people are specifically meant to be included, hold conversations in privacy. The best communication between you and the child will occur when others are not around.
- Embarrassing the child or putting him on the spot in front of others will lead only to resentment and hostility, not good communication.
- Donât tower over your child. Physically get down to the childâs level then talk.
- If you are very angry about a behavior or an incident, donât attempt communication until you regain your cool, because you cannot be objective until then. It is better to stop, settle down, and talk to the child later.
- If you are very tired, you will have to make an extra effort to be an active listener. Genuine active listening is hard work and is very difficult when your mind and body are already tired.
- Listen carefully and politely. Donât interrupt the child when he is trying to tell his story. Be as courteous to your child as you would be to your best friend.
- Donât be a wipe-out artist, unraveling minor threads of a story and never allowing the childâs own theme to develop. This is the parent who reacts to the incidentals of a message while the main idea is list: i.e., the child starts to tell about what happened and the parent says, âI donât care what they are doing, but you had better not be involved in anything like that.â
- Donât ask why, but do ask what happened.
- If you have knowledge of the situation, confront the child with the information that you know or have been told.
- Keep adult talking (âYouâll talk when Iâm finished.â âI know whatâs best for you.â âJust do what I say and that will solve the problemâ), preaching and moralizing to a minimum because they are not helpful in getting communication open and keeping it open.
- Donât use put-down words or statements: dumb, stupid, lazy: âStupid, that makes no sense at allâ or âWhat do you know, youâre just a child.â
- Assist the child in planning some specific steps to the solution.
- Show that you accept the child himself, regardless of what he has or has not done.
- Reinforce the child for keeping communication open. Do this by accepting him and praising his efforts to communicate.
Culled from childdevelopmentinfo.com
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