Effective Time Outs
by Elaine M. Gibson
From Dr. Sylvia Rimm's book: How To Parent So Kids Will Learn
These cookbook steps to successful time-outs work!
If you follow the steps EXACTLY, Dr. Rimm promises that...
"Children will become much calmer, will obey most of your requests, and
won't behave as obnoxious little brats. You'll be in control of your
children and you'll be a much more confident parent."
And I agree absolutely. This is a necessary skill.
Recipe for Successful Time-Outs
Follow Exactly
- All adults and older siblings must follow all of these rules.
- One adult tells the child briefly (two sentences or LESS) that the
consequence for specific enumerated misbehavior will be to stay in
his/her room for 10 minutes of quiet with the door
closed.
- The misbehavior should be specified. Don't select all, just the
worst (e.g., hitting, temper tantrum, talking back).
- If the child is likely to open the door when it's closed, arrange it
so the door can be locked from the outside. Door handles may be
reversed or a latch can be used. For most powerful children, some
kind of lock is required, at least initially. (Don't be afraid of
damaging the child. This is necessary.)
- For the first and every time the child misbehaves in the stated way,
the child should be escorted to the room without the parent losing
his/her temper and without giving any further explanation beyond one
sentence. For example: "You used bad language and you will stay
in your room for 10 quiet minutes."
- If the child slams the door, loses his temper, bangs on walls,
throws toys, screams, shouts, or talks, there is to be absolutely NO
RESPONSE from anyone. Expect the first few times (more with
difficult children) to be terrible. Remember, absolutely NO response
from anyone.
- Set the timer ONLY when the child is quiet (not screaming, throwing
tantrums, or using disrespectful language -- quietly talking to self
is fine).
- After 10 minutes of quiet, open the door to permit the child to
leave. There should be no further explanation or apology or warning
or discussion of love. Act as if nothing unusual
happened. Don't hug.
- Repeat as necessary.
- After one week, only a warning should be necessary to prevent the
undesirable behavior. (With difficult children, it will take much
longer but don't give up. Consistency is the key.)
- Time Out can be used for warning purposes. Give only one warning.
ALWAYS follow through if the child disobeys. REMAIN CALM.
- Your child will be calmer, appear more secure, and be much better
behaved.
FAQ's
about Time-Out
More tips on
time-outs from parents!
Note from Elaine
The use of time-outs gives parents a way to establish their
authority without harshness or punitive methods. The time-out space
is used to regain self-control. When a child is excluded from the
family until behavior fits the family's expectations, the child
learns about family values. Every child's greatest need is to
belong. Time- out works with this child's own motivation.
As kids get older, time-out can be used by both teen and parent.
When things get too heated, anyone can call a time-out and we stop
further "discussion" for 10 minutes. Parents can call a
time-out, but so can kids. It is incredibly fair and it works.
top
home | about me |
difficult children |
survival for parents |
thoughts on parenting
parenting skills/discipline | communication
| common problems
| laugh it off
children's needs |
school days |
summer with the kids |
holidays with the kids
recommended reading |
recommended products |
links |
awards
"your thoughts" bulletin board
|
send page to
friend
|