Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Parenting Guide: 3 Parenting Styles That Helps Children With Behavioral Problems


(MENAFN- AsiaNet News)

Raising a child will forever put a parent or caregiver in some form of challenge, especially when dealing with behavior problems like disobedience, tantrums, aggression, and difficulty in focusing. Like everything else, every child behaves uniquely; yet research shows that certain parenting styles contribute significantly to rectifying behavior and emotional well-being. Here, we will discuss three parenting approaches that actually help children with behavioral issues.

3 parenting styles That Helps Children With Behavioral Problems:

1. Authoritative Parenting – Balanced Discipline Combined With Affection

The authoritative style is most often regarded as an effective style for dealing with behavioral problems. Firm limits are set while at the same time employing compassion and open communication. Rather than using harsh punishments and tearful confrontations, parents explore the reasons for their rules and begin guiding their children towards wise choices.

For example, when a child throws a tantrum, an authoritative parent acknowledges that,“I can see that you are upset,” yet sets limits on the child's behaviors concerning throwing a tantrum,“We don't hit or scream. Let's talk it out instead.” The balance creates trust and teaches self-control and acknowledges respect. Over the years, this has worked toward the diminishing of a child's defiance, thus increasing cooperation.

2. Positive Parenting: Encouragement Above Punishment

Positive parenting emphasizes reinforcing the good while extolling the bad endlessly. Attention-seeking seems to be the hallmark of problem behavior among many children. Hence, negative behavior may, at times, be their way of trying to get it. That praise for effort, celebrating small achievements, and rewarding appropriate behavior can go a long way toward redirecting that attention-seeking into appropriate behaviors.

For example, a child who has trouble sitting still for much time during homework may be rewarded for short periods of focus with verbal praise or small privileges. This builds up his or her confidence and helps him or her connect good behavior with good consequences, thereby diminishing disruptive conduct slowly over time.

3. Therapeutic Parenting: Calm, Consistent, and Trauma-Informed

To some extent, children who frequently display behavioral problems do so because of unresolved emotional issues, stress, or trauma in their past. Therapeutic parenting, commonly applied by foster or adoptive parents, strives for calm consistency, patience, and strong emotional security. Parents operating under this name avoid confrontational forms of discipline and stress the importance of connection, reassurance, and clear routines.

For instance, instead of an angry reaction to aggression, a therapeutic parent remained calm, set limits, and later assisted the child in thinking about what provoked the behavior. This process helps prevent escalation and teaches children how to manage their emotions within a caring environment.

No one style fits every family, but in combining an amalgam of the styles from authoritative, positive, and therapeutic parenting into one, a truly multisided technique emerges. Patience, consistency, and a willingness to understand what is driving a child's behavior rather than react to it are keys. With time, these parenting styles can not only lessen behavioral problems but can also enhance parent-child relationships characterized by trust, respect, and love.

 

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