- Will Your Kids
Be Of Good Character?
- by Gary Direnfeld
At some point most parents think
about the kind of person their child will grow up to be. This
is different from what they may do for a living. This involves
issues of integrity, honesty and caring for others. Will your
child grow up to be of good character?
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The answer to the question can
be determined by examining parental behaviour from very early
on. As parents nurture their children and act in their presence,
they provide powerful lessons that will set the tone for what
kind of adults their children will turn out to be.
Two key ingredients can go a
long way to developing your child to be of good character:
1. Helping them to take responsibility for their
actions;
2. Helping them to participate in doing good deeds. |
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When two-year-old Jacob spills
his juice, the parent has several choices in how to respond.
Jacob can be scolded; ignored; helped to clean up the mess or
the parent can clean it up alone. Each response carries its own
message to Jacob. Scolding is upsetting in itself and teaches
Jacob to avoid getting caught. Ignoring suggests the spilled
juice doesn't matter and the behaviour can be repeated. The parent
cleaning up for Jacob suggests Jacob has no responsibility what-so-ever
for his actions and thus he can do as he pleases. Finally, the
parent engaging Jacob in the cleaning process without scolding
suggests there is a natural consequence to behaviour and he must
assume some responsibility for restoring or repairing the situation.
When Jacob is four-years-of-age
and he aggressively takes a toy from another child, again the
parent has choices in how to respond. However, if the parent
explains to Jacob how he hurt the other childs feelings,
has him apologize, return the toy and then negotiate sharing,
Jacob learns the impact of his behaviour on others, restitution
and then negotiation.
Based upon these experiences,
when six-year-old Jacob breaks a window playing ball, you have
increased the likelihood that Jacob will return to you on his
own to report the accident and seek your help to clean the mess
and correct the situation. He will have learned that you are
caring, reasonable and responsible and he will be following the
behaviour you modeled and taught him. He will act less with a
concern of punishment and fear and more with a concern for caring
and responsibility.
To further their childrens
good character, parents are advised to encourage their children
to join them in practicing good deeds. A good deed
is when someone does something for someone else without being
asked or without expecting anything in return. We teach children
about good deeds by their observing our good deeds. We also teach
about good deeds when we ask our children to help out, with only
providing our thanks in return. Our thanks can of course include
expressions of affection!
Through good deeds, children
learn that the world doesn't just revolve around them, but includes
other who may benefit from our help. At first the reward may
come from our praise, but as the child ages, they learn to derive
satisfaction themselves from helping others. Children can help
clear the table, help the neighbour with the yard, share a toy
and join us when we do our volunteer work.
Being of good character doesn't
need to happen by chance. Parental behaviour that encourages
children to take responsibility for their actions, correct situations
and practice good deeds can go a long way to assuring kids grow
up to be of good character. |