Anonymous wrote:Supernanny never had issues with children who "wouldn't" sit on the rug. You just continue to put them on it without interacting with them, and they will eventually stay on it for the specified time.
Oh how the kids are in charge of so many families now. Imagine being a teacher and trying to control a whole room full of these snowflakes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is stupid because she assumes all children are the same and a slap will cure everything.
No, you missed "If you don't believe in that, she'd be spending quality time (well, one minute per year of age) on the Naughty Rug with no interaction from me."
Two suggestions, pick the non-pansy choice that works for your family.
Anonymous wrote:
It is stupid because she assumes all children are the same and a slap will cure everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can meet one-on-one with Rene Hackney who is a child psychologist and owns Parenting Playgroups.
Agree.
OP, have you eliminated possible physical causes for this behavior? Sounds like you've covered the bases by talking with your pediatrician. Also, just try to cover the basics like enough sleep, physical activity, balanced diet, and limit screen time.
I would also consider have a neuropscyh evaluation. This behavior could be just who she is but it there may be an underlying issue like ADHD or a learning disability.
For strategies at home, I would try this book:
http://www.amazon.com/Kazdin-Method-Parenting-Defiant-Child/dp/0547085826
And this is why we have so many excuses for so much behavior now. The child is 6. In my house she'd get a quality slap. If you don't believe in that, she'd be spending quality time (well, one minute per year of age) on the Naughty Rug with no interaction from me.
My kids are not perfect, but are always complimented on their behavior in public and from teachers. It's because of accountability on our part, and some actual parenting. Flame away.
Nah, we don't flame stupid.
NP here, and this is not "stupid." OP has not given us enough details to jump to the conclusion that the child needs some sort of mental evaluation. We have no idea what kind of parents OP and her DH are. Maybe they've simply been tolerating this for too long, maybe the DD is a spoiled brat, maybe she's just going through a phase. In any case, I find a recommendation to run to a shrink over something like this to be irresponsible. (Unless of course, this poster IS a shrink who is just trolling for new clients.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can meet one-on-one with Rene Hackney who is a child psychologist and owns Parenting Playgroups.
Agree.
OP, have you eliminated possible physical causes for this behavior? Sounds like you've covered the bases by talking with your pediatrician. Also, just try to cover the basics like enough sleep, physical activity, balanced diet, and limit screen time.
I would also consider have a neuropscyh evaluation. This behavior could be just who she is but it there may be an underlying issue like ADHD or a learning disability.
For strategies at home, I would try this book:
http://www.amazon.com/Kazdin-Method-Parenting-Defiant-Child/dp/0547085826
And this is why we have so many excuses for so much behavior now. The child is 6. In my house she'd get a quality slap. If you don't believe in that, she'd be spending quality time (well, one minute per year of age) on the Naughty Rug with no interaction from me.
My kids are not perfect, but are always complimented on their behavior in public and from teachers. It's because of accountability on our part, and some actual parenting. Flame away.
Nah, we don't flame stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can meet one-on-one with Rene Hackney who is a child psychologist and owns Parenting Playgroups.
Agree.
OP, have you eliminated possible physical causes for this behavior? Sounds like you've covered the bases by talking with your pediatrician. Also, just try to cover the basics like enough sleep, physical activity, balanced diet, and limit screen time.
I would also consider have a neuropscyh evaluation. This behavior could be just who she is but it there may be an underlying issue like ADHD or a learning disability.
For strategies at home, I would try this book:
http://www.amazon.com/Kazdin-Method-Parenting-Defiant-Child/dp/0547085826
And this is why we have so many excuses for so much behavior now. The child is 6. In my house she'd get a quality slap. If you don't believe in that, she'd be spending quality time (well, one minute per year of age) on the Naughty Rug with no interaction from me.
My kids are not perfect, but are always complimented on their behavior in public and from teachers. It's because of accountability on our part, and some actual parenting. Flame away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can meet one-on-one with Rene Hackney who is a child psychologist and owns Parenting Playgroups.
Agree.
OP, have you eliminated possible physical causes for this behavior? Sounds like you've covered the bases by talking with your pediatrician. Also, just try to cover the basics like enough sleep, physical activity, balanced diet, and limit screen time.
I would also consider have a neuropscyh evaluation. This behavior could be just who she is but it there may be an underlying issue like ADHD or a learning disability.
For strategies at home, I would try this book:
http://www.amazon.com/Kazdin-Method-Parenting-Defiant-Child/dp/0547085826
Anonymous wrote:You can meet one-on-one with Rene Hackney who is a child psychologist and owns Parenting Playgroups.