I know John is entirely too young to understand the concept so it's not something that we are going to start soon, but I'm wondering what are the signs/personal developments that indicate a time out would be effective and they would understand what it means?
John has started hitting when he is upset, and we just say "no hitting" when he hits one of us, then he starts hitting himself in the head. Again we say no hitting and if he doesn't stop we just hold his arm on the side of his body and try to divert his attention to something else. This seems to work now, but I'm trying to figure out what the next step is.
Re: When did you start time-outs?
Honestly, I used the diversion approach for a really long time. In fact, I still use it! I think it's a really good way of getting them away from the bad behaviour. I mean, we're looking for good behaviour right? Since we try to focus more on positive discipline, we make a much bigger deal when she does something right, than when she does something wrong.
I think we started using time outs somewhere between 18 months and 2. We only do it for one minute per year of age. So at 3.5, we'll do around 3.5 minutes (but less if she's genuinely sorry/acknowleges the behaviour right away). We don't do it all that often, because I think the more you use Time Out, the more 'diluted' it gets. I save it for when she's being REALLY stubborn, and as a result, it usually works pretty effectively.
I never knew time-outs were such a controversial topic.
We started using time-out when Mia was around 2 (maybe a bit younger) and they've been quite effective in our home. Obviously she didn't understand the concept when we first started, but we didn't expect her to. At 4 she fully understand what a time-out is and what kind of behavior will garner a time-out. They don't happen often, but when the need arises, we use them.
LOVE this book and strategy! I actually use a version of it in my classroom and it works wonders with even some of my most difficult students.
I'm wondering this too...since I seem to say "No..." an awful lot, he has learned to say the word "NO" pretty darn well.
So I'm trying to replace my "No..." with "Not Nice!". Terrible Two's have arrived EARLY.
My FAVORITE book, I think it should be required reading for all parents! This is why we don't do time outs either