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May 7, 2014

This post is part of my series on How to Shape Children’s Behavior.

This post is long. I thought about splitting it into three parts, but each section builds on and relies on the rest, so I decided to keep them all together. Thanks for reading!

The other day, a parent asked me for advice on appropriate punishments for their child’s misbehaviors. I don’t think he was thinking too hard about word choice, but it’s a single word that can make a big difference.The way we think about consequences versus punishments has huge implications for how we parent and raise our children. Any person who cares for children needs to know this: every parent, every teacher, every daycare provider.

We all require consequences

Speed limitThe street I live on is not an especially busy one, but every once in a while, I can hear the screech of tires as a car rounds the bend and zooms past our house. I’m not a fan of the speeding, so sometimes I consider how we could slow people down:

  1. We could put up a speed limit sign. However, I think most people already know the speed limit in a residential area, yet still choose to speed.
  2. We could take it up a notch and have a “YOUR SPEED” sign added, flashing the driver’s current speed. This would be effective for people who actually intend to follow traffic laws but sometimes are unaware of their speed. Without a police car to back it up, though, it’s about as useful as a speedometer– it simply notifies the driver that they are speeding, but does not result in any meaningful consequences.
  3. We could add the police car. Occasionally, I do see a police car camping out at a nearby intersection, presumably to catch speeders. Yet people continue to speed after they are gone. I’m guessing that even after receiving a ticket, a habitual speeder will eventually begin exceeding the speed limit again. As the memory and pain of the ticket fades, the tendency to revert to old habits is strong.
  4. We could have some serious speed bumps installed. The kind that makes you cry out, “OUCH!” if your car gets scraped up, and the kind that will definitely cause you to slow down the next time you come down the street.

Yes. That’s what we need. Some serious speed bumps. Would you continue to go zooming down that street? I know I sure wouldn’t. Once I realized that those bumps were there to stay, consistently scraping the underparts of my car every single time I raced over them, I would slow down and go the appropriate speed.

It’s just how we are as humans. As much as we may generally agree about a set of norms and rules, we are apt to break them from time to time when it is convenient for us or pleases us. Unless there is a consistent and meaningful consequence each time we deviate, we tend to push the limits according to our whims.

Children need consequences

I don’t think it’s that different with kids. Every year, my students and I work together to develop a set of class norms. Out of thirty children, about half of them naturally abide by the norms. It is only natural to keep their hands and feet to themselves, they would never dream of doing anything but speak and listen respectfully, and they seem to have been born with the ability to always remember things like turning in homework and putting their names on papers. Then there are another ten students who find our norms easy to follow… about 95% of the time. Once in a while they are off task or distracting others, but a meaningful look from me is usually enough to get them back on track. At most, a verbal warning is all that is needed to get them in line.

And then there are the 2-5, depending on your class that year. Every teacher knows the 2-5. No teacher ever forgets those 2-5. The 2-5 students who behave as if they never knew a set of norms existed. The 2-5 students who don’t seem to register any meaning in your meaningful looks, who regard verbal warnings as inconsequential, and who only seem to change when their undesired behaviors are consistently met with meaningful consequences.

Perhaps your children are part of the 50% that naturally and easily abide by “the norms” of your household or classroom. If that’s you, be grateful, and carry on. You must be reading my blog for the food. (However, even the most angelic students have been known to behave differently at home in the absence of a class full of peers and a teacher. Perhaps I have something useful to share with you, yet.)

Perhaps your children are part of the 33%: the children who usually have no problem behaving well, but need an occasional reminder to get back in line. Your child’s teacher probably has no complaints, but you’ve noticed at home that they can push your buttons (or their siblings’ buttons) from time to time and you are looking for a way to minimize such behaviors. If that’s you, be grateful, and read on. Hopefully you will find a concept or idea or two here that can benefit you and your family!

If your child is part of the 7-17%, you probably know it. You have already met with the child’s teacher to develop behavior plans at school, your child might have a behavioral IEP (Individualized Education Plan) in place, and/or the report cards have consistently reported that your child “Needs Improvement” in multiple areas of citizenship. If this is you, be grateful for the gift of life you’ve been entrusted with, and read on. I am glad you are reading and researching and looking for ways to help your child! You care and involvement make a tremendous difference, even if it’s hard to see in day-to-day life. I’ve worked with many parents over the years, many of who seemed to feel despair after years of dealing with challenging school behavior. Every year, however, we saw clear growth and improvement. It took a lot of work, but it was so rewarding to see the fruits of our labor at the end of the year. If this is you, then I’m guessing your time at home can be quite a challenge at times and that you are hoping that the rest of my post will change your lives.

Students who followI hope it does, too. But of course every family is different, and there is no one-size-fits all cure for these kinds of things. Read other books and blogs and attend parenting workshops and classes. Do your research and consider what might work best for your family. I hope to share my experiences in working with children and offer insight on how I was able to effectively change specific behaviors. With 30+ children (including 2-5 very challenging ones) each day, I had to come up with systems that were practical, realistic and effective. What follows is the thinking behind my method of what I call “graduated consequences” and some ideas for how you might implement it in a family setting.

What graduated consequences are not

First, let me be clear about what graduated consequences are not, and why the common scenario of threats and punishments can actually be detrimental to everyone.

Take, for example, a situation where a student is misbehaving and annoying people. The teacher says, “Stop doing that.” The student stops, but later does something else to annoy classmates, so the teacher repeats, “Really, you need to stop doing that!” The student continues acting up, so the teacher threatens, “If you keep doing that, I’m going to send you to the office!” The student stops for a while, but later in the day acts up again. Since a couple of hours have passed, the teacher has cooled a bit and merely repeats the threat, “Do you want to go to the office? No? Then you need to stop!” Again, the student stops temporarily, but later does something else, at which point the teacher finally sends the student to the office.

In a school setting, if I did something similar and threatened punishment until I couldn’t stand it anymore and sent a student to the office for finally “going too far,” this would probably result in a number of undesired results, including:

I have witnessed variations of this situation in classrooms and in families a number of times. A parent keeps telling a child to stop, threatens with a punishment (“If you don’t stop we are going to leave!”), keeps threatening, and either the child stops or the parent keeps threatening punishment (which is an increasingly empty threat the more they say it but don’t follow through).

There are only three ways this scenario can go, and all of them have drawbacks:

1. The child stops the behavior. This is the best of the three options, but is still weak in that a misbehaving child received no consequences for their initial poor choice(s). They are apt to repeat it in the future.

2. The child keeps pushing it, and the parent eventually follows through with the threat. While it is good that the child knows you really will follow through (which gives you more credibility in future instances), it’s likely that it took a few more rounds of warnings before you followed through with the threat. The child loses their sense of control because they did not know at which point you would finally break and give the consequence. The child also feels a sense of unfairness because they had, in a sense, “gotten away with it” the first five times and they don’t know why the sixth time should suddenly be any different and actually result in a consequence. Even though you kept warning them, in a way, they didn’t really see it coming. This sense of lack of control will probably make the child act out even more once the punishment is fulfilled, and that’s no fun for anybody.

3. The child keeps pushing it, and the parent does not ever actually follow through with the threat. This teaches the child that sometimes, you don’t really mean it. It takes away credibility from all of your future threats. In the future, when you actually follow through, they will be even more upset, because they might have thought they could get away with it like last time. Worse, you rarely follow through and the child learns that your warnings are meaningless so your child does not listen to you.

In these instances, any victory is temporary, at best. However, none of these scenarios sets you or the child up well for future instances, and none of them teaches your child anything about actually improving behavior. It just staves off poor behavior for a little while until the next round.

Understanding the difference between consequences and punishment

Merriam-Webster defines punishment as “suffering, pain, or loss that serves as retribution,” and “severe, rough, or disastrous treatment.” Compare this with the definition of consequence:something that happens as a result of a particular action or set of conditions.” You will quickly see that they are not the same.

Punishments are usually threatened, and then finally given. Sometimes, they are not even threatened– they are just given after the matter. This can be the source of great anger, confusion, and frustration in children. They did not know that there would be this particular punishment (or, in some cases, any punishment) for their actions, and they have no control over what is to follow.

As strange as it sounds, punishments can cause children to be resentful but not necessarily make better choices in the future. Consequences, on the other hand, empower children to make better choices and reduce bitterness and anger when they reap the consequences of their actions. Consequences are about cause and effect. As the consequence-giver, there is little (if any) emotion attached, no anger necessary, and much consistency required. Here is a table to clarify what I think of as some key differences between punishments and graduated consequences as pertaining to children’s behavior:

Punishments Graduated Consequences
The main goal is to punish someone for a past undesired behavior. The main goal is to change someone’s future behavior.
Punishment is threatened for an undetermined amount of time, then given. Consequences are immediately administered.
The person in charge usually endures a period of increasing annoyance before finally hitting their “limit” and giving the punishment. In other words, they get very frustrated and upset. The person in charge immediately addresses any inappropriate behaviors with a consequence (however small). Consequently, the person in charge does not have to feel as annoyed. In other words, they do not get very frustrated or upset.
Takes time to dole out, and is generally unpleasant. Decisions are often made in the heat of the moment, which increases chances of giving unreasonable, unjust, or unrealistic punishments. A simple matter of progressing down a series of pre-set consequences. The process is fairly quick, and most major decisions have already been thought out.
Child judges whether things are fair/unfair. Child already understood what would happen next and that this is a natural next-step. They tend to accept consequences without fuming or questioning the fairness.
Child feels no control over what will happen or when it will happen. Child understands what will happen (and they knew it would happen as a result of a behavior choice they made). They also understand why the consequences are happening (which is an important part of changing their future behavior).

Now that we see that punishments and consequences are different, here are some other crucial things to keep in mind as you consider how you will develop a system of graduated consequences.

What are graduated consequences?

In short, “graduated consequences” are what I call a system of consequences that are increasingly weighty the more a child continues to make poor choices in a day. In my classroom, I set up a system of graduated consequences to address everyday, run of the mill misbehaviors: rolling eyes, messiness, distracting classmates, etc. I found that simply and gently pointing out the boundaries with smaller “nudges” were more effective than jumping to a huge consequence for certain misbehaviors.

If a student makes a poor choice, I would try to give a meaningful look to communicate a wordless warning first. To some students a meaningful look is a consequence. They feel it in their insides as my eyeballs make their hearts race in alarm. I have found this to be sufficient to end ~90% of undesired behaviors in the classroom.

How to Use Consequences EffectivelyFor the 10% that continue, simply telling them to stop is very effective.

For the 5% that still continue, then I would officially place them on the “consequence track,” by adding a simple but powerful phrase: “This is your warning.”

Here is my official (graduated) consequence track:

1st consequence: verbal warning, “This is your warning.”
2nd consequence: visual warning, “Pull your yellow card.”
3rd consequence: complete a “refocus form” in another teacher’s classroom. The form must then be signed by parent and returned the next day.
4th consequence: detention
5th consequence: conference with parents and possibly principal.

It’s very effective. I find myself saying, “This is your warning” only a few times a week, and we only get to the yellow cards a few times a year (for the whole class). There is no need to threaten the child with some other impending punishment—they already know what the next step will be if they continue to make poor choices. Even though something happens each time they make a poor choice, they are never surprised, and I believe this gives them a sense of control over their own actions and behaviors.

So let me take you through an example of how it would look to go through the system of graduated consequences. Let’s say it’s reading time in the morning. I notice that one student does not have her book out and is instead playing with her eraser. I give her a meaningful look and she puts it away and takes out a book to read.

Later, during a math lesson, I notice her spinning a pencil on her desk. I walk over and tell her to take out her work and pay attention. She begins to, but several minutes later, I see her throwing crumpled scraps of paper at a neighbor, so I say, “Sienna, stop throwing the paper. This is your warning.” She straightens up, clears her desk, and focuses. Usually, I don’t have to go any further than this to get a child to straighten up for the day (or for the next few weeks, really). But, for the sake of the example, let’s suppose she then begins flicking eraser bits around her desk. I would turn to her and say, “Sienna, clean up the eraser bits and pull your yellow card.” She would clean up, pull her yellow card, and return to her seat. I would remind her to focus, and remind her that the next offense will send her to another classroom to complete a “refocus form.”

Later in the day, after lunch, we’re at the carpet and I see the person behind her ask her to move over to give more space. She not only ignores this request, but she scoots back to take up more of his space. I coolly ask, “Sienna, what just happened?” She knows from my tone of voice that I know exactly what happened, so she owns the truth. I calmly acknowledge her choices, but am firm in the consequences: “Thank you for telling me the truth. That was the right choice, and I’m glad you didn’t try to lie about it or you would have received further consequences. Now please get a refocus form and go to room 26. You can come back when you’re done.” She is not happy about this, but she also knew it was coming. She calmly walks to the back, gets her form, and exits the room. The whole process has been pretty simple and straightforward.

Later in the day, we would meet privately to reflect on and discuss the behaviors. Oftentimes, there is some other trigger underlying the inattention or misbehaviors. Sometimes I cannot find one. However, the graduated system of consequences minimizes opportunities for a distracting student to veer me and the rest of the class off course for more than a few seconds. I can calmly continue with my agenda while still administering consequences to shape behavior. This is especially important in a classroom setting.

The first consequences are relatively small and are enough to help most children straighten up. The children would not be surprised at any point, and they would learn to not argue when given a consequence. Arguing won’t do anything but earn you further consequences (for being disrespectful), and the best way to avoid more consequences is to simply stop the undesired behavior. Children learn surprisingly quickly, if not from their own mistakes, then certainly from watching others.

Once students understand how the system of consequences work (you’ll have to run through it a couple times for them to grow familiar with it first), everything moves more smoothly. The first couple times of using it are more for them to test you out (and see if you really will call them out for “pushing it”). It may seem rather ineffective at first, and you might find yourself thinking, “Hey, I said, ‘This is your warning,’ but she still talked back! This doesn’t work!” In that case, go up the next level and give a consequence for talking back. If she keeps pushing it, work your way through the consequences until she stops the poor behavior or she receives a more serious consequence. Once she realizes you really are following through, the next time you say, “This is your warning,” you can bet she will make a greater effort to control herself and stop the undesired behaviors.

Like I said before, there is no one-size-fits all policy. If I saw these behaviors in a child who usually has great behavior, I would probably talk to him privately and investigate more first to see what the root of the problem is. Usually, I find that something else is going on and respond accordingly. However, for the 2-5 students a year who frequently need reminders of where the boundaries are, this is an effective way to gently but firmly draw the lines in place.

Of course there will be times when something hugely unacceptable (for example, hitting someone) happens, and this isn’t the time to simply say, “This is your warning,” and carry on with the lesson. Those instances need to be handled on a case-by-case basis.

Graduated consequences for the family

Now that we have an understanding of how graduated consequences work, it’s time to think of how this can be used in a family setting. The good news is that you can customize the steps and consequences according to what works for you, and what is meaningful to your children. The bad news is that I am not going to fill in all the blanks for you—every family and every child is different.

However, here are some ideas for how this might work out in the home. First, simply and firmly tell your child to stop the undesired behavior. If it continues, then:

1st consequence: Give a verbal warning, “This is your warning.”
Now your child knows they are “officially on the consequence track.” Once they understand how the system works, this simple phrase will be enough to have them straighten up most of the time. Remember, the first couple run-throughs will probably involve your child testing you to see if you really mean it.

2nd consequence: Give a visual/physical warning, “Bring me _______” (a predetermined symbolic “warning object”).
This is effective in giving your child a tangible way of registering that they need to reset. Sometimes they need to see/feel/hold something to realize they need to change. As your child walks to their room to retrieve the object, it is also an informal timeout for them to pause and think through their actions and hopefully get themselves together enough to stop the undesired behavior.

Some ideas for visual warning objects: a laminated yellow index card, a large popsicle stick in their pencil cup that is painted/colored yellow, a snazzy pencil, etc. It just needs to be something that you can hand them during your initial talk and say, “When I ask you to retrieve this object, it’s your second warning—it means I’m really serious, and you’d better get yourself together or you will receive the next consequence.” The object should have a permanent house, whether it is a specific drawer, the pencil cup, or in their backpack.
You might want to skip this step, depending on the age of your child.

3rd consequence: Complete a refocus form.
It might be something like this.
Again, you might want to skip this step, depending on the age of your child.

4th consequence: Give a timeout.
Have a designated space where the child must remain for a given period of time.
Again, you might want to skip this step, depending on the age of your child.

5th consequence: Take away something that matters to the child and, if possible, is related to the offense.
For example, TV time, dessert, screen time (ipad, computer, smart phone, video games), a week of texting, money, etc.

6th consequence: Lose some other (bigger) privilege.
For example, a month of texting, grounded from social activities, TV for two weeks, etc.

Practical steps to get started

1. Set up your own system of graduated consequences. It can be any combination of the above ideas. Maybe steps 3, 4, and 5 are simply increasing amounts of screen time being taken away (instead of “the object,” a refocus form, and a timeout). Customize it to what is meaningful and age-appropriate for your child. Type it all up clearly and print it.

2. Explain how it works to your child. After going over the 4-6 graduated consequences, I usually do some role-play with my students, and have a volunteer act out a character that keeps “pushing it,” while I play the teacher part. I find that role-playing helps so when the real thing comes, none of it surprises the children. It’s usually easier to prevent problems than deal with them after the matter. They are expected to submit to the consequences, rather than being angry about them.

3. If this is your first time using a graduated system of consequences, then target a single behavior that you want to see improvement in. The goal this first time around is more to learn the system (for both you and your child!), and not as much to change a behavior. Choose something fairly easy for this first time, as learning a new system of how to do things will already be a challenge for both you and the child.

4. Begin immediately with this one target behavior, and be consistent… day after day after day after day. Hold your child to that high standard and don’t let things slide– children have the ability to pick up on that very quickly and might subconsciously “push it” as they feel out how far the boundaries really are. You must be consistent! This is easily the one thing that will make or break the whole system of consequences. The moment your child believes that sometimes you mean it and sometimes you don’t is the moment you lose credibility and power to help her make effective, long-lasting change. This is also a good case for Mom and Dad to get on the same page, because we’re all too familiar with how children can play that game.

5. Apply it more generally to other expected behaviors as you and your child grow more familiar with this system. If, on the other hand, there are behaviors you wish to ingrain in your child (that are not yet “expected behaviors”), consider concurrently using a rewards system to help them develop a good habit.

It can be very wearing at first, but a lot of effort at consistency in the beginning will set the tone for future behavioral endeavors and make everything increasingly easier. The more you get the hang of it, the more it becomes second nature. Once your child understands that “This is your warning” really will be followed by the next consequence if they continue to push, they will begin exercising restraint like never before. They just need to know where the boundaries really are, and you must be consistent in showing them.

Choosing Consequences Carefully

In my classes of 30 children, I had to think carefully about the consequences for my students. They all needed to fit a few criteria, including the following:

  1. Be meaningful to all students
  2. Communicate appropriate messages (or at least not communicate unwanted messages)
  3. Be realistic and practical for me to administer/minimally disruptive to the class.
  4. Be able to be administered immediately

These criteria are very important things to consider as you develop your own system of consequences. What is “meaningful” or “realistic and practical” will differ from family to family (and maybe even child to child), and you need to think through it carefully.

1. Consequences should be meaningful

You need to make the consequences something that your child cares about. If your child loves to spend time quietly reading in her room, then sending her to the haven of her room for hitting her brother is probably not a very meaningful consequence. If your child is bored at a restaurant and starts acting up, then setting up the consequence of leaving the restaurant might actually encourage poor behavior if the child wants to leave. Find something that matters to your child.

2. Consequences should communicate appropriate messages, or thinking through the consequences of your consequences

First of all, it is vital that you think through what the consequences of your consequences are. Yes, I said the consequences of your consequences. Here’s what I mean. One time, I was teaching at a workshop when a parent proudly shared a story about what she did with her son. Since he was not cleaning up his toys, she threatened to donate all his toys to a local charity if he did not clean up all his toys. The day eventually came when he did not clean up all his toys. True to her word, this mother made the boy pack up his toys, and drove him over to a donation center and made him donate his toys.

One chance. One mistake. And then… bam. All his toys, gone. Even to me, that seemed rather harsh and unjust.

I had to bite my lip to hold back my comments. I think she concluded with something about how he kept his room clean after that, but I couldn’t help but wonder what the consequences of her consequences would be. Sure, a clean room is a nice thing to have, but I would argue that there are more important things to consider, such as how consequences can shape character– for better or for worse. How would this event affect the child’s perspective on giving to charity? Would he forever see it as a punishment rather than a privilege to give to others? Would he see generosity as a trait of the weak, rather than the strong? Hopefully none of these things would happen, but it goes to show that we must think very carefully about the message we are giving with our consequences. Always consider the effect they might have on our children and their character as they grow.

I have also seen children being forced to say sorry to someone. This can give the message that saying sorry is a bad thing: If I say sorry, that means I lose. If I say sorry, that means he wins. If I say sorry, that means I am admitting that I am wrong. If I say sorry, it’s a punishment.

Saying sorry shouldn’t always mean many of these things, and often doesn’t mean any of them. Apologizing can actually be a very good thing. It can be healing, restorative, and peace-giving. If we thoughtlessly resort to it as a quick consequence, we may be losing out on the chance to teach our children more about true repentance, reconciliation and forgiveness.

As you form your own system of consequences, always keep these things in mind:

Consider these scenarios and the hidden messages that might get communicated:

Consequence Message Communicated
You didn’t clean your room, so now you also have to clean the bathroom. Helping with household chores is bad (versus encouraging child to help around the house out of responsibility and thoughtfulness).
You didn’t pick up your toys, so now you have to give away your toys. Giving to charity is bad. Plus, one false move and you lose everything (this takes away a child’s sense of control in her life).
You didn’t do your homework, so now you have to go to your room and read for an hour. Reading is something only to be done when you have to (versus encouraging it as a fun and enjoyable leisure activity).

Finding appropriate and meaningful consequences is one of the hardest pieces for me in this process, and to be honest, I don’t always get it right. Sometimes I just do what’s easy (like temporarily taking something away) rather than spending the time and energy thinking of something that will effectively and meaningfully counter the unwanted behavior. It’s hard to individualize consequences across a class full of children, but I hope to be more thoughtful about this when working with my own children. We won’t always get it right, but being aware that your consequences can have a longer-term and deeper impact is a good first step!

3. Consequences should be realistic and practical things you can and will follow up with

I have heard parents threatening their child with “If you get another warning, I’m gonna cancel the Disneyland trip!” True story. This happened in the middle of a parent-teacher conference.

This was not a good idea. You already bought the tickets. You’re not really going to cancel. Once the kid figures this out, you have undermined your own authority and made your words empty. And if you are going to follow through with it, why should the whole family be punished for one child’s misbehavior?

Futhermore, if the child didn’t know that Disneyland was on the table before they had any behavioral setbacks, it’s unfair and ineffective to drop it on them like that. If they knew ahead of time, at least they could have clearly seen the progression of cause and effect from the start. If you just drop it on them, they will feel very out of control of their lives, and will have little motivation to control their own behavior in the future.

As a sidenote, I also felt that this was unfair to me as the teacher. How could I possibly give a warning now, knowing that it wasn’t the simple “nudge” that I intended it to be, but was actually possibly canceling a family trip? Yikes!

Also, if you choose consequences that are too complicated to carry out, children will pick up on it and might take advantage of the fact that you don’t really want to follow through with it. Think of something realistic, practical, and easy for you to administer. Try to arrange it so the only person feeling the consequences of the action is the child—not you or the whole family.

4. Consequences should happen immediately after the misbehavior

If you have some faraway or abstract punishment, it doesn’t affect them in the present and it won’t impact them the same way. The child needs to be able to see the strong connection between poor choices and consequences, and they need to feel the cause and effect.

For example, students in my class frequently used sports practice as an excuse for incomplete homework. Whenever I mentioned this to their parents, I often heard parents threaten that they would not sign the child up for the next season if the child had any more incomplete homework.

Okay. We found something meaningful to the student: soccer. Check.

We are also communicating that schoolwork takes precedence over extracurricular activities. As a teacher, I can get behind that message. Check.

This is also an action you know you can and will follow up with. Check.

Choosing consequences…But this is not the way to do it. First of all, next season as a whole is unrelated to this trimester’s homework. Furthermore, it’s not until next month or next year, so it will feel far away and abstract and not matter very much to the child right now. Even if you did follow through the following year, it is unlikely to affect their immediate behavior and habits.

Here is a better way to use it. “The next time you have an incomplete assignment, you will have to sit out during soccer practice that evening.” (Yes, even if that means you can’t play in the weekend game.) This hits home, and it hits home now. Avid soccer players probably enjoy practice very much, and the thought of missing practice or sitting on the bench and watching others play is not very fun.

When you ask your child to begin their homework in the next 5 minutes, they might dilly-dally a bit. If you notice they are still watching TV six minutes later and the homework is still not done, try, “I asked you to start your homework five minutes ago. You haven’t started yet, so this is your warning. I want to see you with your homework out in five minutes. Remember, the next consequence is to miss soccer practice.” If they know the next step is losing out on practice, and if they know you will not hesitate to follow through, I would guess that five minutes later, homework will be out.

Meaningful, thoughtful, realistic/practical, and immediate.

Good luck!

I hope you have picked up a concept or two (or a whole system) that you find helpful in steering your children toward better behavior. I believe it is our job to train our children up with the tools to be able to control themselves as needed. While outward behavior is not necessarily any indicator of character, intentionally shaping it is one way we can help our children develop and grow.

(I know it was long: THANK YOU FOR READING!!!)

Too hard? Here’s an easier system to try: An Alternative (and Easier) System of Consequences.

This post is part of my series on How to Shape Children’s Behavior.

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Related Posts:

How to Shape Children’s Behavior

Preventing Misbehavior: What Every Parent Should Know

Using Rewards Strategically to Shape Behavior

The Heart of the Matter

A Better Way to Say Sorry

One Thing at a Time

Be Consistently Consistent

38 responses to “How to Use Consequences Effectively”

  1. Glen says:

    How do you handle the consequence escalation when there are multiple undesirable behaviors in play. For example, back-talking mom, poking brother, not completing homework. Does each negative behavior get it’s own consequence ladder? Or does each offense step the child up a single ladder? Do they perhaps get one official warning for each offense, but then all subsequence offenses are steps of the consequence ladder?

    The situation I described happened. My son was having trouble doing homework, so he got a warning, then an escalated warning to get his chit, then he (grudgingly) completed his homework. A short while later he was told to stop annoying his brother who was also doing homework. Where would the “annoying the brother” fall ?

    • joellen says:

      Each poor choice steps the child up the ladder:
      1. Acts out during homework time: “[Child’s name], you need to focus. Don’t make me ask you again.”
      2. Back-talks to mom: “This is your warning. You need to speak respectfully with me.”
      3. Refuses to do homework that he is able to complete (but simply doesn’t want to): “Go pull your yellow card. Don’t push it– you know what the next consequence will be. I’m going to check back in one minute, and I expect you to be working.”
      4. Finishes homework, then pokes brother: Next consequence.

      First of all, it would be extremely hard to continuously categorize and keep track of each offense within each category. Secondly, assuming he has shown the ability to master each of these behaviors if he wanted to, then he should always make better choices, and will be given a consequence every time he makes a poor choice (regardless of category).

      A note on the homework one: is it possible that he doesn’t know how to do it or is otherwise frustrated? If this is the case, you might want to look into that and see if he really chose not to finish it or simply could not finish it (although in this case, it sounds like he just chose not to). If it’s something you are absolutely sure he can do but just chose not to, then he gets a consequence. It’s possible that he didn’t understand a math concept in class, or doesn’t understand what the instructions are, and instead of asking for help, he just doesn’t do it. A lot of kids have yet to learn to ask for help when they need it. Some kids don’t even realize when they don’t understand it– they only know that they don’t want to do it.

  2. Lorna says:

    Joellen,
    I’m … what is the polite word for gobsmacked? This is so carefully laid out. It seems simple, but there’s a lot of thought behind making it truly doable. I like the similarities between the refocus form and the apology format we’ve already had such success with.

    I really hadn’t given sufficient weight to the “lack of control” feelings that children have, and their frustration when adults act like petty Greek gods. I think I suddenly see the roots of many problems that have been plaguing my efforts.

    This is another post to actively ponder and internalize over the summer. Your response to Glen’s question is very helpful too. Amazing job – thank you so much!

    • joellen says:

      Wow, thanks Lorna! I really appreciate your encouragement! After I’ve spent hours and hours revising this (ridiculously long) piece, a kind message like yours makes it totally worth it. I am glad someone is benefiting from it!

      Also, FYI, I started a post on dawdling last night… ironically, as I was procrastinating working on this post (my own version of dawdling :)).

  3. Micky Curtis says:

    Fantastic again. Please keep posting these, you are an excellent writer.

  4. Ruth says:

    I am a mother of 3 children under the age of 6 and have been eagerly following these parenting blog posts since I saw one on facebook. I FELT that they were exactly what I needed. I have been helping my children to do the 4 step apology and I started using it myself. What’s more? The other day my husband came to me and said sorry (I was pridefully thinking that he didn’t mean it) and then he went into “…it was wrong because…” and made his first 4 step apology!! I was thrilled! It has changed our relationship.

    In relation to this post:

    I did not grow up with consequences and have learned that I am completely clueless as to how to parent my children effectively. My children are good kids, but I have not taught them how to follow rules because my rules have been spotty and unrealistic at best and I punish instead of giving consequences, I just didn’t know any better! Now I feel a glimmer of hope. Hope that we can change together, that the back-talking will stop, that the disobedience, the hitting, pinching and biting, will stop. I know this is just the beginning and I am excited and terrified at changing, but what we do now is not working. I know I need to do this. Thank you for sharing these life lessons with me.

    I will let you know how it is going in the future.

    • joellen says:

      Wow, that really means so much to me! I am very passionate about marriages, too, and I am so delighted to hear how something you read here is positively impacting your marriage relationship!

      I can’t wait to hear how things go! It will be tough-going at first– new systems are hard for everybody. Once you all get the hang of it, though, I really think/hope things will change significantly for the better!

      Thanks for taking the time to share your encouraging words with me!

  5. Angela says:

    This was super well-thought out, Jo. I can tell you put a lot of time and thought into writing this piece. Your efforts are not wasted as it flows with logic and builds upon each concept really well. Great job! 🙂