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SEVEN HABITS OF PEACEFUL PARENTS, THE
A Facilitator’s Manual
Dr. Joseph Cress,
Dr. Elizabeth Lonning, and
Burt Berlowe
Paper, $51.95
96 perforated pages, 8½" × 11"
ISBN 0-89390-512-7
View Table of Contents
View Excerpt
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The Seven Habits of Peaceful Parents is a complete seven-week
training course for parents. In their work, the authors have discovered that
successful parents have certain traits in common: They manage their
emotions, resolve conflicts, trust their own parenting style, communicate
openly, nurture their childs self-esteem, spend quality time with their
children and discipline in a consistent manner. With this course, facilitators
can help young parents-to-be and existing parents learn the habits they
need to be successful.
Reviews
Thank you for partnering with us to educate our employees on this
important topic. We are confident that the valuable information you
provided will make a difference in the lives of our employees and their
families.
Jamie Langlois, work family coordinator, 3M Employee
Assistance Resource Center
It is through quality programs such as the one you presented that
we, in partnership, are able to serve individuals and families in the
community of North Minneapolis.
Jonette Zuercher, coordinator, The City Leadership
Academy
I enjoyed this course and received a lot of information and ideas to
put to use.
Family child-care provider
We use most of these ideas in our center. I hope to use them when
Im a parent.
Family child-care provider
The most valuable thing about your presentation was that it sparked
serious conversation about raising children and allowed parents to express
their deepest concerns about their children.
Linda Kos, parent group facilitator, Frogtown Family Resource
Center
About the Authors
Dr. Burt Berlowe is a professional writer and Minneapolis community activist
specializing in parent education. After receiving his journalism degree from
the University of Arizona, he worked as a reporter and editor for
metropolitan and neighborhood newspapers. He has written four books,
including Peaceful Parenting in a Violent World.
Dr. Elizabeth Lonning is a clinical psychologist with a family-counseling
practice in Davenport, Iowa. An adult adoptee, she is also active in the
adoption field. She received advanced degrees in counseling and
psychology from South Dakota State University and the University of
Northern Colorado.
Dr. Joseph Cress, a clinical psychologist in the Davenport area, is
consulting psychologist for the Council on Children at Risk. He received his
advanced degrees in clinical psychology from Southern Illinois
University.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part One
Peaceful Parenting
How to Use this Manual
The Nuts and Bolts of Preparation
Part Two
Habit OneManaging Your Emotions
Habit TwoResolving Conflicts Peacefully
Habit ThreeParenting Your Own Way
Habit FourCommunicating Openly
Habit FiveNurturing Your Childs Self-Esteem
Habit SixSpending Quality Time with Your Children
Habit SevenDisciplining in a Consistent Manner
Wrapping It Up
Appendix: Handouts
Handout 1: Peaceful Parenting Classes Begin
Handout 2:
Unrealistic Self-Statements
Realistic Self-Statements
Handout 3: Cognitive Diary
Handout 4: ABCs of Anger Management
Handout 5: Summary of Behavior Strategies
Handout 6:
Positive Consequences/Rewards
Corrective Consequences/Punishments
Handout 7: Tips for Terrific Talk
Handout 8: Behavior Recording Chart
Handout 9: Parenting Styles
Handout 10: Temperament
Handout 11: Growth and Development
Handout 12:
Active Listening Stems
I Message Statements
Handout 13: Feeling Words
Handout 14: Communication Exercises
Handout 15: Ground Rules for Family Meetings
Handout 16: Important vs. Urgent Quadrant Sheet
Handout 17:
Positive Feedback
Corrective Feedback 1
Corrective Feedback 2
Handout 18: Social Skills
Handout 19: The Relationship Savings Account
Handout 20: Model Statements
Handout 21: Ten Parent-Child Situations
Handout 22: Expectations
Handout 23: Parent Pre/Post Test
Handout 24: Parent Satisfaction Measure
Handout 25: Facilitator Self-Assessment
Handout 26: Behavioral Plan
Following is an excerpt from The Seven Habits of Peaceful Parents.
All rights reserved. Copyright © 2001, Resource Publications, Inc.
Chapter 6: Habit Three
Parenting Your Own Way
Purpose of the Session
The purpose of this session is to help parents realize that effective
parenting solutions vary from family to family and even from child to child
within a familyone size does not fit all families.
Skills Parents Will Learn
1. Parents can obtain insight into their own personalities in a number
of ways.
2. By understanding their childrens temperamental differences and
developmental characteristics, parents will come to better understand the
personalities of each of their children.
3. Parents will come to learn how structural differences can affect
child-parent relationships.
4. Parents will learn that a number of other variables also affect the
child-parent relationship.
Background for the Facilitator: Different Strokes for Different Folks
Each family is unique. There is no one way for all families to grow
and do things together. Parents have different personalities; therefore
some parenting strategies work well for one kind of personality but not
for another. Even within the same family, children can have different
personalities and temperaments. These diversities affect the quality of
parenting. At different developmental stages, different types of discipline
work better than others. Being cognizant of childrens developmental
stages is important for parents in terms of identifying appropriate goals and
strategies. Additionally, many other factors influence effective parenting.
These include health issues, religious differences, cultural diversity, and the
actual composition of the family, whether it be a nuclear, blended, or
single-parent family.
Parents need to utilize discipline strategies that are most compatible
with their own personalities.
As much as possible, disciplinary strategies should be consistent with
childrens temperaments.
Behavioral strategies work better for young children, and cognitive,
rational problem-solving strategies often work well with adolescents.
Match the discipline to the developmental age.
Blended families require generous amounts of time to allow for boundaries
to be established and disciplinary roles to form.
Health, ethnicity, religion, and socioeconomic status can have a significant
effect on child-parent relationships.
Session Plan
In contrast to many parenting approaches and their orientations,
Peaceful Parenting presumes that each family is unique, that there
is no one approach or solution that is going to be effective all the time for all
the children. As a result, Peaceful Parenting focuses on parents
understanding subtle differences and nuances in a variety of variables and
using this knowledge to help establish the most effective and the least
restrictive disciplinary program for each child.
Exercise One: What Kind of a Parent Am I?
Parents can obtain insight into their own personalities in a number
of ways. They can read a psychology book about personality types and try
to analyze themselves. They can consult a psychologist and arrange to
take some personality tests. Or they can look at their basic parenting style
and develop insights. An example of this approach is discussed in
Parenting, a book written by Samellyn Wood, Roger Bishop, and
Davene Cohen.1 The book discusses four different patterns
of parenting, rating them all equally. No particular pattern is recommended
over the others; the parenting styles are simply different. Our parenting
styles handout (Handout #10, Appendix A) summarizes the four styles,
called the Potter, the Gardener, the
Maestro, and the Consultant. Parents are
urged to decide which one most closely fits their personality. This
knowledge will provide insight into which parenting strategies will be most
effective.
The Potter
Potters find it easy to be consistent and often use behavioral programs.
They maintain charts and checklists, and monitor the changes in their
childs behavior. Also, they tend to be goal-oriented.
The Gardener
Gardeners use preventive, distracting, and diversionary tactics. They
believe primarily in positive feedback and rarely use corrective
consequences. Overall, they are serious students of child development,
and carefully factor in their childs developmental level in terms of
expectations and consequences.
The Maestro
Maestros focus on self-esteem. They are also goal oriented. In general,
they want to identify and maximize a childs area of strength. In their
view, as long as a childs self-esteem is well nourished, the child will
be responsible and achieve reasonably well.
The Consultant
Consultants are advisors who focus on problem-solving strategies. They
see themselves as partnering with their children. Cognitive, rational
problem-solving and decision-making are the ultimate goals in their parental
philosophy.
The facilitators should have the participants break into groups of two,
making sure that they are not with spouses. Let them discuss the various
attributes and characteristics of each of the four parenting types and
have them perhaps begin to tentatively identify what sort of parent they
are. Again, it is important that parents remember no one type is better
than the other and all are valid and appropriate. After the dyads have
met for about five or ten minutes, there can be some brief group discussion
about what various parents have learned.
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