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Disciplining with HonorHave you tried just about everything to get your kids to behave? Then maybe you need the honor approach. This is what discipline without honor looks like: A teacher told a fidgety student to sit down. When he refused she stood over him and demanded it. Well he sat down all right but said this, "I'm sitting on the outside, but I'm standing on the inside." You see, obedience without honor only looks like it works in the short run? and it definitely doesn't work in the long run. Teaching honor shapes a child's heart and his motivations. The book, Say Goodbye to Whining, Complaining, and Bad Attitudes in you and your kids! by Scott Turanksy and Joanne Miller, says the key to good behavior is not in controlling your children, but in instilling honor into your family life. What is Honor? But first, what is honor? Basically, it's three things: treating people as special doing more than what's expected and having a good attitude. You see, when you instill honor into your family's life, you get to the heart of obedience. And when I say heart, I mean your child's thoughts, intentions and motivations. Once a child understands and learns honor they'll be motivated on their own to behave. Here are some of the guidelines Turansky and Miller use in teaching honor. 1. Teach children to treat people as special.
2. Teach children to do more than what's expected.
3. Deal with a bad attitude.
The Wise Appeal One way to do this is through the wise appeal. Let's look at a typical example. Fifteen-year-old Cal comes home from school and says to himself, "Whew! I'm tired. I just want to listen to my CDs and rest." Just then, his mom comes in to greet him. "Cal, I'm glad you're home from school. I'd like you to go out and mow the lawn." Here's one way this scene could play out. Cal looks up at his mom and irritated say, "Mom! Mow the lawn? Not now. I'm tired." Then, mom feels like she has to get more intense. Instead, Cal can use the wise appeal and say, "Mom, I understand you want me to mow the grass. But I have a problem with that because I am tired right now and had a tough day at school. Could I rest and mow the lawn in two hours?" See the difference. The wise appeal formula goes like this: I understand you want me to because I have a problem with that because Could I please You can even teach preschoolers the wise appeal. So remember, honor is the foundation for good behavior that goes beyond mere obedience.
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