When it comes to parenting there is certainly no ‘rule book.’
Although I’d love to think that my children will be complete darlings I know that
this is a pretty unrealistic wish. A particularly tricky time for any parents
in when their children hit the hormone fuelled teenage years. Their behaviour
is difficult to control at the best of times, but one thing that may help me if
I have children is Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA).
One reason why a teenager may ‘play up’ is because they are
bored. Quite often they will just pick a fight with their parents and as my dad
says ‘would argue that black is white’. Although it is very easy in this kind
of situation to argue back and just shout at your children, this attention
could be part of what is causing the problem. If it is attention that the child
craves then even bad attention could act as positive reinforcement for them to
do the same again knowing that they can get a reaction from you. Maag (1996)
argues that this happens in classrooms as well. Teachers expect children to
behave well so they ignore good behaviour but when they behave badly they
reprimand them, or send them out the classroom which often won’t punish them
but will positive reinforce their behaviour, especially if they are admired by
their peers for it.
One way I may be able to reduce my children’s negative
behaviour is through extinction. This is where the reinforcer that is
maintaining the target behaviour is removed. Hart et al (1964) tested this with
a child who continuously cried, thinking that his crying behaviour was
reinforced by teachers giving him attention. Teachers were instructed not to
pay him any attention when he cried, and after only 5 days his crying frequency
reduced. This extinction could also be combined with positively reinforcing
good behaviours. In the case of a teenager, praising them for the washing up
may give them the attention they are craving and show them you don’t think that
‘everything they do is wrong.’ This attention may also make them less likely to
pick a fight with you. Allen et al (1964) tested this by training nursery
teachers to only attend to good behaviour and ignore undesired behaviour. They found
that this technique successfully altered undesired behaviour.
A type of reinforcement that may sometimes feel difficult to
implement but could be very powerful, especially in teenage years in natural reinforcement,
where the child learns the consequences of their behaviours themselves
(Horcones, 1983). Skinner (1989) argued that these reinforcers may be more
powerful as they may more rapidly shape behaviours. So, letting a teenager learn
the negative consequences of drinking may be far more effective than telling
them off for doing it. I for one have certainly started to learn my limits,
after one to many horrific hangovers.
So, Applied Behavioural Analysis could certainly teach me a
few lessons in bringing up my children during their teenager years. Shouting
and nagging will only make things worse, and sometimes taking a step back and
letting them learn their own lessons may just be the best thing to do.
References
Allen, K.E., Hart, B., Buell, J.S., Harris, F.R., &
Wolf, M.M. (1964). Effects of social reinforcement on isolate behaviour of a
nursery school child. Child development, 511-518.
Hart, B.M., Allen, K.E., Buell, J.S., Harris, F.R., &
Wolf, M.M. (1964). Effects of social reinforcement on operant crying. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1,
145-153.
Horcones. (1983). Natural Reinforcement in a Walden Two
community. Revista Mexicana de Analysis
de la Conducta, 9, 131-143.
Maag, J.W. (1996). Parenting
without punishment. Philadelphia: The Charles Press.
Skinner, B.F. (1989). Recent
issues in the analysis of behaviour. Colombus, OH: Merrill.
Laura Clarke- Blog 4
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