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To help your child manage his or her anger, teach your child
how to express him or herself appropriately, control their feelings and think
about how their behavior will make others feel. For example: reading your child
a book that show situations or scenarios when a child feels angry, sad, etc.,
shows them that other people also have times when they that way - and possible
ways that they can handle that.
- Feelings are difficult for must of us - adults and kids
- Stay in the adult role - respond vs. react
- You can't reason with a child having a tantrum
- Allow you and your child some cool down time
- Label feelings so that you can better manage them
- Sometimes anger masks another feeling - such as hurt or fear
- Be cautious about assigning a motive to your child's
behavior. Instead, HALT and asses whether your child is H - hungry, A - angry,
L - lonely or T - tired.
Activity ideas
- Ask your child to use art supplies to make pictures of
different feelings
- Play a game with your child - try to guess what I'm feeling
by the face I make
- Role-play with your child possible situations that make them
angry, and how they can try on a new behavior.
- Get a poster that asks "How are you feeling today?" and ask
your child to point to faces that show how they're feeling
Book suggestions
You can find most of these books at your local library or bookstore. We've also
provided a link to the book details on Amazon.com.
- When You're Mad and You Know It by Elizabeth Crary &
Shari Steelsmith
- The Feelings Book by Todd Parr
- Sad Isn't Bad: a Good-Grief Guidebook for Kids Dealing With
Loss by Michaelene Mundy
- A Volcano in my Tummy by Éliane Whitehouse & Warwick Pudney
- The Feelings Books: The Care & Keeping of Your Emotions
from the AmericanGirl Library
- Josh's Smiley Faces: A Story About Anger by Gina
Ditta-Donahue
- Your Child's Self Esteem by Dorothy Corkville
Briggs
- The Friendly Classroom for a Small Planet: A Handbook
on Creative Approaches to Living and Problem Solving for Children by the
Children's Creative Response to Conflict Program
- Keeping the Peace: Practicing Cooperation and Conflict
Resolution With Preschoolers by Susanne Wichert
- Who's Calling the Shots? How to Respond Effectively to
Children's Fascination with War Toys and Violent TV by Nancy
Carlsson-Paige and Diane E. Levin
The influence of parenting styles on children's behavior
Following are four parenting styles, which affect a child's
behavior:
Authoritative Style: In this style the parents are
nurturing, responsive and supportive - yet they set firm limits for their
children. Parents attempt to control their children's behavior by explaining
rules, discussing and reasoning. They listen to the child's viewpoint, but
don't always accept it. Children raised with this parenting style tend to be
friendly, energetic, cheerful, self-reliant, self-controlled, curious,
cooperative and achievement-oriented.
Permissive Style: In this style parents are warm, but lax;
fail to set firm limits, monitor children's activities closely or require
appropriately mature behavior of their children. Children raised with this
parenting style tend to be impulsive, rebellious, aimless, domineering,
aggressive and low in self-reliance, self-control and achievement.
Authoritarian Style: In this style parents are unresponsive,
inflexible, demanding and harsh in controlling behavior. They set many rules,
require obedience to authority, and favor punishment to control children's
behavior. Children raised with this parenting style tend to be irritable,
apprehensive, fearful, moody, unhappy, easily annoyed, unfriendly, sulky,
vulnerable to stress and aimless.
Uninvolved Style: In this parenting style parents are
unresponsive, unavailable and rejecting. Children raised with this parenting
style tend to have low self-esteem, little self-confidence and lack ambition.
They seek other, sometimes inappropriate, role models to substitute for the
neglectful parent.
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