Evidence-Based Parenting: How To Deal With Aggression, Tantrums And Defiance  

Anyone who has raised children or grown up with siblings knows there are some bumpy times in a child’s life. When the smallest up­set causes a major tantrum. Or when it’s close to impossible to get them out the door on time for school. Or when your adorable angel acts like a wild animal.

But some children’s tantrums, irritability and defiance well exceed that typically found among healthy children of the same age. This can be overwhelming for the best of parents, es­pecially as children advance in age.

And it doesn’t help that reactions from loved ones and strangers often leave parents feeling judged for their defeats in the disciplinary arena.

Over the past decade, our research team at the The University of Sydney’s Child Behaviour Research Clinic (CBRC) has treated aggression, non-compliance, rule-breaking and excessive tantrums in children aged two to 16. We’ve used these insights to develop a free online program of evidence-based strategies for parents, called ParentWorks.

The good news is, programs such as ours can help most children with problem behaviours to better control their emotions and, therefore, their behaviour.

Such treatment has the strongest effects in the preschool to early primary school years. Relatively brief interventions of around eight weeks at this age often produce greater gains than those achieved with more complex inter­ventions delivered later in adolescence.

What types of behaviour are we talking about?

Common warning signs that you child’s be­haviour may be getting out of control include:

1) When oppositional behaviour not only oc­curs regularly, but also interferes with family life. This might cause the family to constantly be late because of delays leaving the house, or to avoid social events where tantrums might occur.

2) When stress arising from child issues spills over into the rest of the family, such as the parents’ own relationship.

3) When the child’s behaviour leaves par­ents feeling flooded by emotions that overwhelm their usual coping skills.

4) When children seem driven to elicit esca­lating and emotionally charged parental reac­tions, even when punitive or distressing to all.

We now understand these “behavioural” problems are often just as equally “emotion­al” problems.

This means that the best interventions not only reduce problem behaviours, but also help children build solid skills in self-regulation. Such foundations form the base of their mental health in childhood, adolescence and adulthood.

Overcoming persistent problems

Ironically, the more stress the child’s be­haviour places on parents, the more parents find themselves relying on practices that work to manage it in the moment, yet play into daily cycles of parent-child conflict and stress in the long term.

As such conflict continues, children often become more and more skilled in the art of oppo­sitional behaviour, and therefore increasingly harder to discipline.

Child behavioural problems often become so embedded in family life, shifting them requires new strategies to be incorporated into the day-to-day routine at home. This is why the most powerful interventions are those that train par­ents as therapists, so to speak.

So what can you do?

The earlier you can intervene in behav­ioural problems, the better. Use parenting strat­egies that take the emotion out of discipline and put it back into the rest of family life.

For example, you might try:

1) Rewarding good behaviour (such as coop­eratively playing with a sibling) with rewards based in the parent-child relationship (such as physical affection and short bursts of parent-child time) given at the time of the good behav­iour.

2) Rewarding good behaviours even in the context of discipline. This might mean enthu­siastically praising a child for helping to pack away toys, having disciplined him or her for being destructive with those toys just moments earlier.

3) Responding to misbehaviour immediate­ly, with a calm and clear instruction that directs the child to what they should instead be doing. For instance, get the child’s attention and say, “The way you are speaking is very rude, you need to use a nice voice”, following the first in­stance of such behaviour.

4) Responding immediately to escalations with a consequence, such as a brief time-out or quiet time. This is where the child sits alone somewhere safe and boring and is only permit­ted to leave once they have been quiet for a pe­riod; say, two minutes.

These strategies can act as an effective circuit-breaker for cycles of parent-child esca­lation. They also provide young children with opportunities to develop vital skills in self-reg­ulation.

With simple strategies such as these, par­ents can avoid accidentally rewarding misbe­haviour, which is easy to do when these behav­iours demand so much time and attention.

Getting help

You can find more evidence-based strategies for preventing and reducing oppositional behav­iour at the ParentWorks online program.

However, when child behaviour problems are significant, parents may need the support of psychologists or other professionals at a clinic such as the CBRC. More severe oppositional behaviour can often occur alongside other emo­tional and developmental disorders, so it’s im­portant such children have a comprehensive assessment.

If you are seeking assistance for opposition­al and aggressive child behaviour, don’t stop un­til you find the help that is right for you.

By arrangements with The Conversation

Follow this link to join our WhatsApp group: Join Now

Be Part of Quality Journalism

Quality journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce and despite all the hardships we still do it. Our reporters and editors are working overtime in Kashmir and beyond to cover what you care about, break big stories, and expose injustices that can change lives. Today more people are reading Kashmir Observer than ever, but only a handful are paying while advertising revenues are falling fast.

ACT NOW
MONTHLYRs 100
YEARLYRs 1000
LIFETIMERs 10000

CLICK FOR DETAILS

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

KO SUPPLEMENTS