Best Consequences for Different Ages
- From birth to 1 year: no discipline needed. Exception: make sure your baby can fall asleep on his own by 2 months.
- From 1 to 3 years: structuring the home environment, distracting, ignoring, verbal and nonverbal disapproval, moving your child, and temporary time-out.
- From 3 to 5 years: the preceding techniques (especially temporary time-out), plus natural consequences, loss of possessions and privileges.
- From 5 to 12 Years: the preceding techniques plus reasoning more with your child, delay of a privilege, "I" messages, and some negotiation about what's fair. Structuring the environment and distraction is no longer needed.
- Teen years: loss of privileges, "I" messages, and family conferences about house rules and fairness of consequences. For teens who are upset and angry, an occasional time-out may still be helpful for calming down.
- The techniques listed above are further described below.
What to Expect
- Any inappropriate behavior can be changed. In young children, most single problem behaviors will improve in 2 to 4 weeks with a targeted plan.
- Behavior training (discipline techniques) gradually changes a self-centered toddler into a mature teen who is thoughtful and respectful of others, assertive without being aggressive, and in control of his or her impulses.