Category: General Parenting the Positive Discipline Way Sign-up *FREE 6 session Certificate class

Parenting the Positive Discipline Way Sign-up *FREE 6 session Certificate class


June 12, 2023

Starting June 12, 2023 - June 28, 2023  6-session certificate class with Alicia Angove
Scheduled Monday and Wednesday from 3-5 PM

Positive Parenting –- Parenting the Positive Discipline Way
Have you found yourself disciplining your child and thinking “There has to be a better way”? Have you ever yelled at or spanked out of exasperation or in an effort to modify your child’s behavior? The Positive Discipline Model is founded on mutual respect and teaches parents and educators to use kindness and firmness at the same time.

Research shows that children have an intense desire to feel connected and contribute; therefore, young people who have a strong sense of connection are less likely to exhibit misbehavior in school and at home. The Positive Discipline program was developed by Dr. Jane Nelsen and is designed to teach young people to become responsible, respectful, and resourceful members of their communities.

Jane Nelsen gives the following 5 criteria for effective discipline:
Helps children feel a sense of connection. (Belonging and significance)
Is mutually respectful and encouraging. (Kind and firm at the same time.)
Is effective long-term. (Considers what the child is thinking, feeling, learning, and deciding about himself and his world – and what to do in the future to survive or to thrive.)
Teaches important social and life skills. (Respect, concern for others, problem-solving, and cooperation as well as the skills to contribute to the home, school, or larger community.)
Invites children to discover how capable they are. (Encourages the constructive use of personal power and autonomy.)
The tools and concepts of Positive Discipline include:

Mutual respect. Adults model firmness by respecting themselves and the needs of the situation, and kindness by respecting the needs of the child.
Identifying the belief behind the behavior. Effective discipline recognizes the reasons kids do what they do and works to change those beliefs, rather than merely attempting to change behavior.
Effective communication and problem-solving skills.
Discipline that teaches (and is neither permissive nor punitive).
Focusing on solutions instead of punishment.
Encouragement (instead of praise). Encouragement notices effort and improvement, not just success, and builds long-term self-esteem and empowerment.

Register - https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=x3jCY5q3qE6t98zcYAK_o9I9HNOuWQRLluk-YDxEKsxUN0tNQUk1SkFKQ0VIUzI1MFRVMk45RUpTNC4u&fbclid=IwAR1c8Y5wkmKasdii9NQnId0j2EXvbwAo93-HQFQaOFDNBCqSBdX_-kFfrhw

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