The Website of Dr. Mark Goulston

Usable Insight – Get Your Kid Started on Right Foot in School


Talking with your kid about a future
they haven’t messed up (yet)
is worth hours of blaming, excuse making and endless arguing
over something they have


Whenever your pre-teen or teenage kid has screwed up, teaching them a lesson after the fact isn’t exactly the easiest task.

One of the best ways to avoid that is to use the “side by side” technique I’ve described in my about to be published book, “Just Listen” Discover the Secret to Getting Through to Absolutely Anyone (AMACOM, Sept. 15, 2009).

Do this while driving in the car (where you’re both looking forward instead of engaged in one of those face to face lectures that they can’t stand) or engaged in some activity or errand to “buffer” the conversation.

If it’s a pre-teen/middle schooler and they’ll still engage with you, say: “How can you tell which one of your friends is most likely to go too far and get in big trouble?”

They may smell a rat and say: “What?”

If so, continue with: “Yeah, I was just wondering which of your friends is likely to go too far this year, because if they do and you’re their friend, you might get pulled in to help them out.  It might be helpful to know which one and what they might do, so you can be ready.  I mean isn’t that what friends are for?”

You don’t start to lecture them or tell them to avoid that friend.  Doing it this way is a way of helping them develop judgment about “going too far” and that doing so has consequences.

If they tolerate that question, ask them next: “While we’re on the topic of what’s coming up, how do you tell the difference between a class you need to stay up to date on and one you can kind of get away with doing stuff at the last minute?”  This again helps sow the seeds for their developing the capacity for anticipation and for judgment.

You can use a similar approach with a wide variety of questions.

And if you’re dealing with a teenage high schooler (or even one in college) who doesn’t want any advice and says, “Just leave me alone!” (Know any who fit that description?) here is something you might try to that again leverages a future that they haven’t screwed up.

Say to them: “As you go through high school or college, your mom/dad and I can deal with you in one of two ways.  In the first way, we can leave you  alone, including waking you up, getting on your back about homework (this won’t work with an intrusive micromanaging parent), making introductions for you to people (tutors, friends who can give you a job, etc.) that can help you succeed and get ahead.  You might actually prefer learning from your successes and failures and feel you’ve done it all by yourself.  In the second way, we can put both feet in and do any and everything we can do to help you become successful and happy in life. However if we do that, you can’t talk to us disrespectfully, tell us to “shut up” or swear at us, and if we do set up opportunities for you with people outside, you have to keep us posted on what you’re doing so those people don’t think you’re a flake.”

Good luck. Your kids’ adolescence can be a bumpy ride.

****

P.S. If you like these kind of tips, I think you will like “Just Listen” and hope you’ll check it out and spread the word to your friends.

P.P.S. If you missed my FREE American Management Association webcast, “The Simple Secret to Getting Through to Difficult People” that had 1700+ attendees, you can catch it at: AMA webcast.

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5 Responses to “Usable Insight – Get Your Kid Started on Right Foot in School”

  1. Tweets that mention Mark Goulston » Blog Archive » Usable Insight – Get Your Kid Started on Right Foot in School -- Topsy.com Says:

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  2. Mark Says:

    What about nursery schoolers or those entering kindergarten?

    You probably read stories to your children at this age before they go to bed. If you do, start your routine by asking them “What was the best and worst thing that happened to you today?” Let them answer and don’t give advice or reassure them until you ask them, “What made it the best and worst thing?”

    Then ask: “What is the thing you’re most excited and most nervous about tomorrow and what about them are you most excited and most nervous about?”

    Their sharing there answers and then answering because will help them develop perspective that good and bad things happen in life (but it all works out), realize that talking through things is a good idea and also that there is a cause and effect to things that happen in life.

  3. Tania Says:

    Where are you from? Is it a secret? :)
    Tania

  4. PianoTrade Says:

    PianoTrade…

    Hello ;) Thanks heaps for this indeed!… if anyone else has anything, it would be much appreciated. Great website Super Piano Links http://www.en.Grand-Pianos.org Enjoy!…

  5. Good Online Meds Says:

    Hello! Excellent site, keep up the good work!

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