The Houseparent Network
10 Ways for Your Tween to
Avoid Trouble
10 Ways for your “Tween” to Avoid Trouble.
1. Supervise your teens: Yes they are seeking independence but you still need to
know where
they are going and who they will be with. Don’t assume every “teen” activity is
properly
supervised or safe unless you have chaperoned it or have otherwise satisfied
yourself. All kids
want a little fun, adventure and to “hang out” with their peers. You are
probably going to have to
work with other like minded parents in your community to provide safe supervised
outlets for
them.
2. Friend Control: This will certainly bring the most controversy and experts
disagree. Strictly
from the standpoint of keeping your teen out of trouble help your child pick a
core group of
friends who you are comfortable with. You should know them and their parents.
Undoubtedly, next to properly supervising your child, his/her friends will have
the greatest impact on their actions and what there exposed to.
3. Teach values and character: This is what your child will rely on when you are
not there to help them. Respect for other people and there property,
assertiveness, self confidence, honesty and empathy. You don’t have the time and
they don’t have the attention span to teach them what to do in every possible
situation. They should trust their conscience if it feels or seems wrong,
dangerous or unfair it probably is
4. Set boundaries: You have the absolute right and responsibility to set the
rules. Where the go, Who they go with, How late they stay out, What they wear.
These are all examples of boundaries. Have you ever driven on a high twisted
mountain road? You were probably comforted to have the guardrails there. How
high or low you set the boundaries is your decision and yours alone. As a guide
you can remember if you set the rail to high your child may have trouble being
independent and worse constantly look to others to tell him what to do. We have
all seen the no and low boundary kids. They are the ones who skip school, stay
out as late as they like, drink, experiment with drugs and sex. These kids also
have that strong adolescent need for the company of friends. Since most parents
have boundaries that prohibit there children from joining them they are
constantly on the look out to make new friends that can join them. Don’t let
your child be one of them.
5. Communication- Talking alone is not going to solve all the conflicts that are
inevitably going
to occur between you and your teen. But communication is at the base of the
parenting pyramid.
You cant set clear boundaries, educate, counsel or coach with out it. There are
times and
situations were active listening and exploring feelings are appropriate. There
are also times were
a more directive approach is needed. Remember “tweeners” are experts at verbal
judo. Don’t
expect them to thank you for your wisdom or see your logic when you have to make
an
unpopular decision.
6. Responsibility: Look for appropriate opportunities for your adolescent to
start solving his or
her problems on their own. They may gentle guidance at first and you may need to
approve the
solution. Chores are good! and absolutely necessary for self confidence and
character
development. Be patient, give them step by step instructions, written if
necessary. Its easy to get
upset and Finnish the job yourself, but think of it this way. If you have to
spend two hours a night
for a week teaching your fourteen year old son how to wash dishes, you will get
four years of
relief!
7. Compassion: We all want our children to be loving and to help others. It is
best when they do
this through organized activities such as church, school and scouting. Emphasize
to your child
that there are some problems that require the immediate attention of an adult if
not a specialized
professional. Examples include anything involving a firearm, a friend who is
even remotely
considering suicide, peers who have drug and alcohol problems, sexual activity
with an adult.
8. Unity of Command: This means working with your spouse, ex-spouse or child’s
step to
develop a consistent boundary and discipline system. It may be very difficult if
you are not
getting along but again this is an area that is going to pay big dividends for
both of you and your
child. Allow each parent to have flexibility on the little things and hang
together on the big
things.
9. Stop looking for silver bullet: I have searched long and hard, high and low
and I can assure
you there is not any medications, boot camps, therapy or discipline styles that
is going to work all
the time and for every child. The teen and preteen years are going to be filled
with ups and
downs, fits and starts. You are going to have successes and failures.
10.Resources to learn more:
www.ed.gov/pubs/parents/adolescence (U.S. Department of Education- site is
sometimes hard to get to but well worth it)
www.apa.org/pubinfor/
www.parenthood.com/articles
Books :
THE ROLLER COASTER YEARS- Charlene C. Giannetii and Margaret Sagarese
CRISIS PROOF YOUR TEENAGER- Kathleen McCoy and Charles Wibbelsman M.D.
THE LOVING PARENTS GUIDE TO DISCIPLINE- Marilyn E. Gootman Ed.D.
Steve McCullen is a Maryland Police Officer with experience in Youth Programs.
In addition to writing about parenting issues he hosts the website
http://www.shapethenews.com Please send comments about this article to Steve
at mcfun61@hotmail.com
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