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HomeBuilders:  Establishing Effective Discipline for Your ChildrenHomeBuilders: Establishing Effective Discipline for Your Children By Dennis and Barbara Rainey Learn what to look for as your child goes through each developmental stage, and how to discipline well in each stage.

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The "Forgotten" Part of Discipline by Rob Flood How could a child be happy after being disciplined? More Discipline & spanking articles

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Trading Whining for Honor Guests include: Scott Turansky, Joanne Miller What is whining really all about? Today on the broadcast, Scott Turansky and Joanne Miller, authors of the book Say Goodbye to Whining, talk to parents about teaching kids to honor others. More Discipline & spanking broadcasts
Q&A: Discipline for a Young Child

Dennis and Barbara Rainey

What's the best approach to discipline with my young child?

Barbara: When a child is a toddler, he or she is in what I call "the training twos." When children are 2-5 years old, I call this the "intense training" stage. During these early years, you will notice your children becoming more defiant and rebellious-more temper tantrums, hitting, biting, whining, even lying and stealing. When these behaviors occur, as a parent, you need to deal with each of them effectively and clearly, because you are establishing what is right and what is wrong within your family.

These are often hard years particularly for moms, because you may feel like the cycle is never-ending-that you're teaching the same lessons over and over again. It can take children a long time to learn what you're teaching them.

Dennis: At this age, children start to become independent, and they realize they have their own will. Plenty of toddlers control their entire family, especially mom. If you as a parent find yourself in this situation, you need to take steps to stop the children from dominating you, or you'll really pay the price when your child is a teenager.

What you need to do is sit down with your spouse and make a list for the children of what they can and can't do--what actions require discipline and which you can let go. You will help your kids by drawing up very clear boundaries for them.

Also, go on the offensive. Remind your kids ahead of time about what you do and do not expect. This will help your kids do what's right. When the kids were little and Barbara took them to the grocery store, she would pull up in front of the store, turn around and look at all of them in the car's back seat and remind them that they were not to touch anything on the shelves. The fresh reminder of the rules really helped them obey.

It's good to remember that you're not just trying to train your children out of certain habits or behaviors, but rather that you're dealing with character issues. For example, many children go through an early biting phase. You might be tempted to respond, "Oh, biting is just a phase. The behavior will die out in a few months--no need to deal with it." Behaviors and actions may eventually pass, but the heart issues behind them will crop up in different areas of the child's life.

Barbara: In this case, biting may stop naturally in a child's life, but the action brings harm to another person. This will come out in another area, so you aren't just training your child to stop biting; you're also training the child not to hurt others when they get angry. The character issue is teaching them how to properly handle their emotions.

Dennis: Hebrews 12:11 says, "All discipline for the moment seems not to be joyful, but sorrowful; yet to those who have been trained by it, afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness." Keep the long-term perspective in mind with your child. Yes, you can gloss over these issues and pretend they aren't there, but you will miss "the peaceful fruit of righteousness" that you're attempting to bring about in your child through diligent discipline.


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