Also not covered is what makes "a spoiled brat". In my experience, both as a child and adult, it seems the "spoiled brats" are the children that have little to no boundaries and are allowed to do whatever they want even if there parents are present, and display helpful properties.
I considered my self a pretty forgiving parent, but in my opinion a parent who is not in control of their children at least to a degree where they can be pleasant to strangers in public(what if they dump milk on a stranger in public and laugh?), is not a good parent and their children struggle from a lack of structure.
-- G.K. Chesterton
I think this would be helpful if the parent hadn’t yet tried it, but it hardly sounds foolproof. Are there any parallels in other environments or studies around this?
For example:
> Just to be clear: this is not about just following your child around, cleaning up after them. That would be a failure to teach them responsibility, and yes, that teaches entitlement. This is about seeing yourself as a willing helper, the extra support that our children need to practice or to be willing to do it themselves.
It's not clear to me that just changing the way we see ourselves will actually achieve anything. Even if we see ourselves as "willing helpers", the child might take that to reinforce their view that everyone should be helping them willingly.
I love thoughtful mini-essays, and this is one of those. I just think that in this case the author reaches the wrong conclusions.
In my experience, the key to success in shaping a child's behavior, as in most things, is advance preparation and programming ones own behavior before problems occur.
Before problems start, involve children playfully in every aspect of family life, from chores to recreation, as soon as they can participate and to the extent they are able. Use praise and positive reinforcement for any contribution the children make to family business. Make them feel like active members of Team Family.
In my experience, small children want more than anything to feel like part of Team Family. If a child does something counterproductive or destructive, that is the time to take the author's advice and replace positive reinforcement with graciousness.
My experience is that children who have been treated to a constant flow of positive reinforcement will be more upset by even a temporary cessation of that flow that by any punishment, and will do anything to get back to membership in good standing of Team Family.
I find it astounding that scientists have found that positive reinforcement is the only reliable way to shape long-term behavior constructively, in both humans and animals, in experiments going back to the 1930's, but people refuse to believe the results, so scientists keep finding new ways to run the experiments, and get the same results.
I committed to using only positive reinforcement techniques with my own child, and I was delighted but not surprised by their effectiveness. My biggest surprise was when my child started using positive reinforcement on me. Which in my mind validates the linked post author's assertion that the biggest influence on children's behavior is the parent's own.
My five year old could hike next a cliff because he understood that when dad said "keep two feet away" that I was serious, had his best interest at heart, and his compliance would lead to better things.