Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Resurrecting this thread. My 11.5 yo lied about doing his home work then tried to hide the poor grades on his homework as a result of his lying, slacking off lifestyle the past two weeks.
I just discovered all of this before he left for school this morning. He's a normally a straight A student or at least capable of being a straight A student, so I'm not too worried about longterm grade consequences. However, I am worried about long term damage to the child-parent relationship because he's definitely entering the tween/teen finding his independence years.
So, my question is: How does he suffer consequences while we are on spring break next week? I mean really? Do I make everyone suffer while he sits on the plane for 3 hours with no iTouch to listen to music or watch movies, etc?
I am more pissed about the lying than the grades. Want him to realize the seriousness, but also don't want to go over board on "punishment" while we are all supposed to be relaxing and enjoying ourselves.
Thoughts?
I tend to be a very logical consequence type parent. My approach would be, basically, no "punishment" on spring break EXCEPT to the extent that his lying damaged your trust in him and might make you hesitant to allow him certain privileges, depending on your vacation plans and how much independence you are still comfortable granting him. In terms of consequences or punishments, in our home that would just be changes/restrictions to the homework routine for a period of time.
Homework is required to be done to the honest best of our kids' abilities -- if we can't trust them not to slack off and turn in poorly done work or no work at all, then they clearly need more supervision of their homework time to make sure they're meeting standards as verified by us since they decided to lie about it and thus we can't trust them to monitor their own work right now. Mandatory supervised study hall at the kitchen table, for slightly longer than just their homework would usually take them meaning they also have to study with any time left over.
The above presumes I have rules about homework that are known to my kids in advance, which I do only through elementary school. In middle school, individual homework assignments and daily grades are my kids' business to manage but we require them to be carrying a class grade of B or higher in each class at the end of each month. By high school, we only have grade requirements quarterly and if they can get B grades or above at that check in we don't worry about grades on individual assignments and just let them manage their grades themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Resurrecting this thread. My 11.5 yo lied about doing his home work then tried to hide the poor grades on his homework as a result of his lying, slacking off lifestyle the past two weeks.
I just discovered all of this before he left for school this morning. He's a normally a straight A student or at least capable of being a straight A student, so I'm not too worried about longterm grade consequences. However, I am worried about long term damage to the child-parent relationship because he's definitely entering the tween/teen finding his independence years.
So, my question is: How does he suffer consequences while we are on spring break next week? I mean really? Do I make everyone suffer while he sits on the plane for 3 hours with no iTouch to listen to music or watch movies, etc?
I am more pissed about the lying than the grades. Want him to realize the seriousness, but also don't want to go over board on "punishment" while we are all supposed to be relaxing and enjoying ourselves.
Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:I make DS stand on a stool while I walk around him in a circle, screaming:
"All liars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone"
(Rev 21:8 the King James Version)
It may not stop the lying, but it makes me feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad was a high school teacher for 30 years. He always says, "Never ask a kid to lie to you." By that he means: don't ask questions you already know the answer to. I don't know if this applies in this case, but perhaps something to think about going forward. If you know your kid played the Wii or did something else he shouldn't have done, don't ask him. *Tell* him you know he broke a rule and go from there.
I think you've gotten some good advice above, but I will just emphasize that ALL kids lie sometimes, so don't get too bogged down worrying about your child's personal ethics. Just stick to the facts: lying breaks trust and therefore can't be tolerated in personal relationships. Sometimes lying seems like the easy way out, but in the long run it is detrimental to the relationship. I think a lot of parents get all tied up with the morality of lying when really most lying kids do is just to make things easier/better in the very short term. Not materially different from deciding not to do one's homework and not thinking about the longer term consequences. Our job is to get them to recognize the long-term benefits of being trustworthy, and to act now to reap those rewards.
Your dad's advice is actually borne out by the research. THere's a chapter in *NurtureShock* about kids' lying, and one of the insights is that all kids lie, and it's developmentally normal. They often lie because they don't want to disappoint you, so they give you the answer they think you want, even if it's not the truth, so the best strategy is to emphasize that lying is more disappointing to you than the underlying offense. I think it was that book as well that talked about not setting kids up to fail--i.e., don't ask them questions you know the answer to. Just say that you know they broke the rule and address that issue.