Punishment (and by that I mean physical punishment)
Which is not what Kreskin's friend was saying. He was saying that physical and non-physical punishment doesn't work.
Punishment (and by that I mean physical punishment)
Which is not what Kreskin's friend was saying. He was saying that physical and non-physical punishment doesn't work.
Yes it does. Punishment doesn't have to be hitting of any kind. Why they target low income families is beyond me. High income families often spend far less time with their children than low income families do for one thing. They also cover up a lot of what goes on in their homes - all the way from child abuse to spousal abuse.Punishment does not work.
BUT... to say that it never works, that people should never, etc., is where I draw a definite line.
aaaahahhahahahhahahahahaaaThis study really has nothing to do with the last thread (except that the subject is the same).
Sir Jehovah Pompass's remarks are in black vyr sometimes he makes remarks in other colors, too. If he'd stick to one color (blue, green, plaid, whatever) it'd be easier to read.OK....Assume something like the Post I've Quoted has been reported...
Now Assume you're a Moderator. What the heck is going on? Is someone
who knows how to use a quote feature, quoting others in some bizzare
fashion? Is this all just a copy&paste from an outside article and the multi
-color thing is irrelevant? Are the different colors qoutes of other people on
a different Thread being "Quoted" without their names being included?
Yeah. Sometimes fear is necessary. Positive reinforcement works the best. The whole idea is to promote positive behavior.
positive=>adding/giving
negative=>removing/withdrawing
reinforcement=>increasing behavior
punishment=>decreasing behavior
So positive reinforcement is adding something to increase a behavior. Rewarding for good behavior.
Negative r. means removing something to increase a behavior. Dismissing a child from doing dishes, for instance.
Positive punishment is adding something (like a swat on the bottom) to decrease a behavior.
Negative punishment is removing something to decrease a behavior. IE; removing privileges to stop bad behavior.
How can something be reported for Trolling? How can someone report someone
for pointing out that they think someone is Trolling? How can grown adults not
conduct themselves in a manner fitting to their age? All are good questions.
I've been to the Forum here today, for a total of about six minutes, on three
separate occasions....for the same Thread....how is that possible? Until time
permits for a Moderator to sort those questions out, This Thread will be closed
until time permits for it to be reviewed. Sorry Folks. We'll get to it when we can.
We had a thread about spanking a while ago (which as I recall, degenerated into a flaming thread, I hope posters would be more responsible on this one). Well, another study on spanking has just been released.
Spanking detrimental to children, study says - CNN.com
This study is really in line with several other studies released in the past years (text in blue is from the study, in black, my comments).
Think a little spanking won't do much harm to kids? New research says the effects can be long-lasting.
New study of more than 2,500 toddlers from low-income families found that spanking may have detrimental effects on behavior and mental development.
Berlin and colleagues found that children who were spanked as 1-year-olds tended to behave more aggressively at age 2, and did not perform as well as other children on a test measuring thinking skills at age 3. The study is published in the journal Child Development.
The new study focused on children from low-income families because prior research suggested that spanking is more common among them, Berlin said.
Her study found that about one-third of the 1-year-olds, and about half of the 2- and 3-year-olds, had been spanked in the previous week, according to mothers' self-reporting to the researchers.
That is a high proportion of spanking indeed. No wonder we have such a problem with violence today. Evidently in the families where spanking does goes on, it seems to be routine, quite frequent.
Previous research had also found that parents who spank are more likely to be younger, less educated, single, and/or depressed and stressed, Berlin's study said.
Makes sense. Depressed or stressed out parents are more likely to take out their frustration on their kids (who obviously cannot fight back).
Spanking is most commonly used among parents who were spanked themselves, who live in the South, and/or who identify themselves as conservative Christians.
Moderator Edit: Removed Religious & Political Trolling that didn't pertain to the published article.
These parents also tend to believe in the effectiveness of spanking or believe the child is at fault in a given situation, the study said.
But of course it is never the parents' fault. It does not even occur to these parents that they may be taking out their frustrations with the world (their boss, their spouse etc.)on their children.
Verbal punishment did not appear to have the same detrimental effects as spanking in this study, Berlin said.
Susan Newman, social psychologist and author of "Little Things Long Remembered: Making Your Children Feel Special Every Day," said parents should discourage bad behaviors by taking away privileges such as dessert, or setting an earlier bedtime.
"If the mother sees this fussiness as willful misbehavior and begins verbally punishing or spanking, rather than empathizing with the child, the child's behavior deteriorates into more tantrums and other frustrating behavior," said another clinical psychologist, Laura Markham (not involved in the study).
Newman also noted that children are too young to understand when parenting behavior is wrong, even at the level of abuse. Physical violence gets passed down in families because the only parenting skills people know are the behaviors that they saw at home, she said.
Just the opinion I have held all along, spanking is really a kind of physical abuse. And abuse, whether physical or sexual, does tend to get passed down from generation to generation.
In the spanking study, some mothers said they were receiving parenting services in which they were counseled not to spank their children.
"This is definitively the direction in which services are going and in which, in general, American culture is going," Berlin said.
Moderator Edit: Removed Religious & Political Trolling that didn't pertain to the published article.
Where is the harm? How do you like standing in any line up in the store with a full cart of groceries listening to some kid scream his lungs out because he can't have the $10.00 movie he wants? Next time it happens just look around you. People's hair is almost standing on end and their faces are tense and drawn and they are feeling angry. Mostly they are angry at the negligent parent who allows the screaming to occur. Let me tell ya - in my opinion, it's the parent that needs a damn good smack in such instances.Quite right, VanIsle. There has to be a third alternative than to ignore or to spank. If the child is small enough he could be picked up and put in the shopping cart. If child is too big for that, perhaps the parent could stop the shopping right there and then (and pointedly put away any treats she may have purchased for the offending child). Then impose penalties after going home.
Ignoring the child if the child is causing destruction to the store is not an option. On the other hand, if the child is small enough to stay in the shopping cart and yells his head off, where is the harm?
A screaming kid in a store represents a parent with either poor parenting skills or a complete lack of respect for others. Probably both.Where is the harm? How do you like standing in any line up in the store with a full cart of groceries listening to some kid scream his lungs out because he can't have the $10.00 movie he wants? Next time it happens just look around you. People's hair is almost standing on end and their faces are tense and drawn and they are feeling angry. Mostly they are angry at the negligent parent who allows the screaming to occur. Let me tell ya - in my opinion, it's the parent that needs a damn good smack in such instances.
I'm sure you are right but I think for the most part it appears to be a complete lack of respect for others. Mothers carry on like it wasn't happening (except for the ones who want to show everyone in the store how in control they are NOT and they yell back at the yelling kid) and Fathers usually have this sheer look of panic on their faces.A screaming kid in a store represents a parent with either poor parenting skills or a complete lack of respect for others. Probably both.
In this day and age, and with everything we know about parenting and childhood development, there is no need for it. There are better ways to parent.