Thursday, February 5, 2009

USING TIME-OUTS FOR NANNIES AND AU PAIRS

Time-Out Should Not Be Used as Punishment

We have been discussing discipline. We have discussed time-outs. We have encouraged using timers to help positively discipline children. Most nannies, au pairs, and parents seem to use time-outs as punishment for children. When children do not behave caregivers often make the children sit in a “naughty chair” for a designated amount of time (a minute or so).

But, Jodi Pawel, a licensed Social Worker, Certified Family Life Educator, founder of The Family Network http://www.daytonfamilynetwork.com/, President of Parents Toolshop Consulting http://www.parentstoolshop.com/ and author of 100+ parent education resources, including her award-winning book, The Parent’s Toolshop, ttp://www.parentstoolshop.com/HTML/book.htm explains that time-outs should be used to help children gain control of their emotions rather than as punishment. She does not encourage caregivers to use timers.

The Parent’s Toolshop
By Jodi Pawel
http://www.parentstoolshop.com/HTML/book.htm

Many [caregivers] use the same type of discipline for every problem situation. One tool, however, is rarely effective for all situations. Plus, overusing one particular tool also reduces its usefulness. Time-out is just one tool -- and it really isn't a "discipline" tool; it's an effective anger-management tool. Since the purpose of a time-out is to help someone regain control, it is most appropriate to use when someone has lost self-control or there is extremely disruptive behavior.

Most adults have the mistaken idea that the whole point of sending children to time-out is to make the child suffer for their misbehavior. "You go to your room (or chair) and think about what you did." The tone of voice usually implies, "and you suffer." Imposing suffering only brings on more resentment and power struggles. Effective discipline, however, teaches children lessons from their poor behavior choices, rather than punishing them.

If you want time-outs to be constructive, try following these guidelines:

Develop a plan in advance. Teach children during a happy time about the value of a cooling-off period. Say, "When you feel like you're going to lose control, you can go (specify the place) and do something to make yourself feel better. Then, when you feel better, come out and we can work on a solution."

Teach children how to regain self-control. Suggest things the child can do to calm down while in time-out. Older children can help decide where to go and what they can do to help themselves calm down.

Allow the child to play. Many [caregivers] are upset when they find their child playing during time-out, but it's actually a good sign that the child has regained self-control. If they are ready to play, children might also be ready to do some problem solving.

Select a location for the time-out. Some children calm down faster when they are alone and in a quiet place. Other children have too much energy to be forced to sit still. Some children become more out-of-control and hurtful when they are forced to spend time-outs alone. These children can cool off in the same room as other people, as long as they aren't disruptive.

Some [adults] hesitate to use a child's room for fear the child will view the bedroom as a prison. If the time-out is initiated kindly and the goal is to give the child and you some quiet space, children won't see it as punishment. If you feel the child will be destructive, plan ahead and remove or put objects you don't want destroyed out of reach.

If you force a child to stay in a chair or room, it shifts the focus from what they did and their responsibility for calming down to who is in power. This turns the time-out into a punishment, which removes its effectiveness.

Present time-outs as a choice. A child can choose to settle down or take some time-out. Suggest the time-out in a kind and firm manner, followed by the encouraging instructions to come back when the child is ready.

Avoid timers. Use the child's ability to regain self-control or willingness to act appropriately to decide how long a time-out should last. Timers often turn time-outs into power struggles. If children have calmed down and are ready to return but parents won't let them "come out," it often escalates the situation. If children return before they have calmed down, firmly but kindly return them to the timeout and reemphasize the purpose is to cool off. Describe the behavior you want to see that shows they are calm.

When a time-out is over: If the child lost control due to anger, let it go and don't call attention to the behavior you want to stop. If the problem is serious or recurring, wait until both of you have calmed down and then use problem solving to generate ideas for handling the situation differently in the future.

Think about your long-term goal. If you want children to learn that it is their responsibility to control their behavior, use timeouts as cooling off periods which teach children how to achieve this self-control.

Do you use time-outs effectively working with children?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

we use time outs as punishment and it works for us. I understand that time outs are SUPPOSED to be used only to calm a temper tantruming child, but it has been our punishment of choice. No spanking, yelling, or more severe discipline is needed for us at this point. Plus, the school uses a "naughty chair" as well. When the kids in our Kindergarten class misbehaves they put the kids in a time out on the naughty chair.
NJ Nanny

Anonymous said...

Allowing the child to play during a time-out is against everything I have ever learned. That's nuts. Isn't the point to get them away from the activities so they can get a breather? Playing in a time-out sounds like a reward.
Miranda, Professional Nanny, Boulder, CO

Anonymous said...

I like to use an area of the house that is
very boring to a child-
like a dining room floor or against a hallway wall-or front enterance but still somewhere I can keep an eye on them.

I have the child sit on the floor - as I feel that is the safest place- if they have a fit.

I keep calm and tell them- you need a time out right now- because you need to calm down.
I will come get you when the time out is over.

I don't get into a conversation with them-
I just keep telling them you are in time out right now- take this time to calm down and sit quitely and relax.

One time a child said-
"Please, please I have to tell you something- it's very, very important..."
I finally said- Yes, what is it?
They said- "I LOVE YOU!"

~Andrea - Professional Career Nanny of 8 years -Northern, NJ