Go to local site:
  • United Kingdom
  • United States

Promotions

 

See all promotions.

In the Shop

Discipline tips for tweens

Introduction

Your child has always been an angel and then they arrive... the dreaded tween years. Parenting expert Eileen Hayes has these discipline tips for children aged 8-12.

Eileen Hayes
Supernanny Expert
19/03/2007
5/5 Star Rating
5/5 stars (rated 15 times)

How to deal with tween mean

Your child has always been an angel and then they arrive... the dreaded tween years. Suddenly you may have to deal with backchat, lying and attitude – not to mention strange new music and fashion! Follow these discipline tips for children aged 8-12.

 

Keep your cool

A calm approach works best – don’t overreact or give it too much attention. Think about the example you’re setting… if you go off like a firecracker yourself, your tween is likely to adopt this approach too!

Be firm

When you have to insist on a rule give your reasons, but remain firm.

Try natural consequences

For example, point out that if he doesn’t do his homework, he’ll get into trouble with his teacher.

Use humor

It can work well for this age group. If children are whining, you can do it in a silly voice: “I don’t want to go to work either – let’s stay and play all day!”

Offer rewards

Hugs and praise, a special outing, a DVD rental or a favorite meal are all good ways of showing your appreciation of good behavior.

Set up sanctions

You could take away treasured possessions for a time, ground him or suspend TV privileges and allowance.

Perfect positive discipline

Give more attention to the good behavior you want to encourage, and ignore minor misbehavior as much as possible. It's also a good idea to avoid harsh punishments and only use sanctions (such as grounding) for serious misbehavior.

Top 10 tips for tween discipline

1 Understand your child will want to test out his independence. Answering back or disobeying can often be a way of demonstrating this and showing you that he has a mind of his own. Encourage as much independence as possible, even if it involves some risks – kids need to learn by their own mistakes.
2 Work at reflective listening, feeding back what you’ve been told and not leaping in with your own judgments.
3 Target your praise, describing exactly what it’s being given for.
4 Review and adapt your house rules as your child grows.
5 Don’t give too many orders – these can overwhelm children. Explain why some things have to be, but listen to his views. If you have to overrule, explain that until he’s more mature, there are some decisions you must make for him.
6 Stay calm and avoid arguments as much as possible.
7 Keep criticism to a minimum – and only criticize a behavior, not your child.
8 Good communication at any age is an essential parenting skill. Kids need you to understand how they’re feeling, and to listen to their views – this helps build self-esteem.
9 Try to avoid sarcasm, apportioning blame, and put-downs.
10 Set a good example Remember, kids this age still learn most by example – they are bound to imitate what they see parents do. The best way to have children do what you want is to demonstrate it, not order them to do it!

 

Eileen Hayes
Supernanny Expert

Was this article helpful?

Sign In to rate this article

Find Out More

Related Links

  • Your autistic child: discipline tips that work When it comes to discipline, autistic children have very different needs from non-autistic children – and even between children with autism, similar behavior issues may require completely different strategies. Try these techniques…
  • Helping your ADHD child to behave If your child has ADHD, coping with his behavior can wear you out. But even though they act up, they still need the security of limits. So how do you discipline them without losing your mind?
  • The trust technique is useful when your child is old enough to start wanting some independence…
  • The one strike and you’re out technique As used on Supernanny, this is a useful technique to discipline older children when they push too far...
  • Surviving the teenage years During their teenage phase your children will tell you one thing and act in another way. So how can parents survive the teenage years with their relationships and sanity intact?
  • How to talk to your teen If you find yourself laying down the law to your tween or teen, it might be time to stop and ask yourself if preaching at them is just closing down communication between you