Harsh Discipline Does It Do
More Harm Than Good
Harsh Discipline: Does it do More Harm
than Good?
Recent studies suggest that low-income parents tend to endorse
much harsher discipline, partially because they hold stronger
beliefs about the value of spanking and experience higher
levels of stress.
However, parents who work in high-stress jobs or are
stay-at-home parents who are feeling frustrated or isolated are
also at risk. It's imperative that parents recognize their
tendency to punish a child too severely and take the needed
steps to make sure the punishment is appropriate for their
child's age, temperament and maturity level.
The study's finding showed that parents from lower income
levels or work high pressure jobs are more stressed, and they
react more emotionally to their child's behavior, and thus use
harsher discipline. A parent in this situation may benefit from
outside assistance and learning about alternative disciplinary
strategies that are more appropriate and less harsh.
It's also important for a parent to realize that children
thrive on praise. Parents in such a situation may always jump
to discipline but fail to praise their child for their good
deeds, behaviors and traits. Children instinctively want to
please their parents and make them proud. By encouraging
positive behavior, the parent will most likely discourage the
behavior that has driven them in the past to punish too
harshly.
In order to encourage positive behavior deserving of praise,
parents might want to consider giving their child a task they
know they're able to accomplish, and praise their efforts along
the way. Parents need to also consistently praise their
children for the positive traits they possess. Their child
might be good at math in school, helpful to their little
brother or sister, or is good at drawing pictures. Praise these
good traits and the child is likely to respond by acting
appropriately and behaving positively in order to gain more
praise.
In the end, it's important to remember that a child is just
that - a child. A parent should make a concerted effort to make
sure the discipline is appropriate and take care of themselves
physically, mentally and emotionally so they can optimally
provide for their child's physical and emotional
well-being.
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