June 2014 Moms

No Praise, No Punishment

KatCameBackKatCameBack member
edited October 2014 in June 2014 Moms
I am generally blissfully unaware of theories on parenting, but lately I gone down several internet rabbit holes on parenting topics. Today, it was the style of progressive parenting/attachment parenting advocated by author Alfie Kohn. In Kohn's estimation it is counterproductive to make your children say "please", "thank you", "sorry" or "goodbye". He also finds that praise (even a "good boy or good girl") deadens the intrinsic drive for kids to achieve. I honestly never in a thousand years thought about not teaching kids to say thank you, or not praising or pushing a little from time to time was a thing. Conflicted on how I feel about this... Anyone have any experience here?

Re: No Praise, No Punishment

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  • There are a lot of interesting scientific studies on praise. The short version is that praising effort if super useful, but praising a child's achievements, (or looks for that matter) can be disadvantageous. Saying 'Good girl' is pretty meaningless and can take away from actual praise you give (such as 'Good job working so hard to get that shape in the hole. When you got stuck you turned it, trying so many ways to get it to fit!'. Or whatever).

    Saying please and thank you is important in my book. As far as saying sorry, I focus more on teaching them to be sorry. Saying it just because you have to is useless. Say it because you actually feel sorry.
    BabyFruit Ticker

    BFP 3.8.16  EDD 11.20.16

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  • I will absolutely teach my children to say please and thank you, and I'm ok with being strict about that. I will also give praise when praise is deserved... I also agree that it's important to talk to them about why they are being praised (same as you would talk to them about the importance of manners, or why they might be punished, you know? I think explaining and talking stuff through will a long way).

     

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  • I have recently started to look up "gentle parenting."  I agree with the concept in theory.  I just personally don't know if I can use it in reality.  I'm not the most patient person anyways which is why I'm trying to find better ways to parent.  What I do now isn't working with my 8 year old at times so I'm willing to try the nicer approach.


    ~Jessica~ 


  • If a child doesn't learn to say please and thank you at home:

    1. I feel sorry for their teachers
    2 who's job is it to teach them that?

    Just like holding a door open for a person or other acts of politeness- I think are important life skills and will be modeling these for my children.
    First time mommy-to-be
    E.D.D. June 1, 2014

  • @JmeJoLee83


    I think with gentle parenting, it's just not forced.  The concept is probably taught (someone correct me if I'm wrong), but the parent does not force the child to say as the goal is for the child to want to say it.  Although, I can't say I agree with this and have taught my daughter that we say please and thank you. 
    ~Jessica~ 


  • @fsumom‌ thanks for clarification. I just think it's weird...if a thank you is warranted then you say it. Good manners require a please. To each his/her own though...

    First time mommy-to-be
    E.D.D. June 1, 2014

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