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One Phrase Can Dramatically Improve Behavior In Your House

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“Good job” parrots back my sweet daughter. But good job for what? Does she have any idea what I’m talking about?

Here’s the scene: We are at the dinner table. My 20-month-old is in her high chair, wearing a bib, her plate is on the table on her placemat, and she is eating cut up mango with a toddler fork. I tell her “Good job” and she says “Good job” back to me. Good job for what?

I could be praising her for any of these things:

  • Sitting in her high chair
  • Not pulling her bib off
  • Not throwing food to the dog
  • Answering as we ask her questions during dinner conversation
  • Holding the fork correctly
  • Not swinging the fork around and playing with it
  • Stabbing her food with the fork by herself
  • Putting food in her mouth
  • Eating the mango itself
  • Not screaming or crying
  • Not ripping her bow out of her hair

Shall I continue?

If we want to see an increase in desired behaviors, we want to provide positive reinforcement. By definition, positive reinforcement is when something is presented immediately following a behavior AND that behavior occurs more often in the future.

So in this example, what behavior do I want to see increase in the future? How is my daughter to know that and make the connection that I am praising her for it specifically?

span class="Apple-converted-space"> To make your praise statements work for you and your child, tell them what you are praising. “Good job using your fork nicely” will lead to using her fork nicely again in the future!

Here are some sentence starters to try:

  1. ‘I like how you _____’
  2. ‘Good job doing ______.’
  3. ‘Wow! Way to _______.’
  4. ‘Thank you for ______.’
  5. ‘You did a wonderful job at _____.’
  6. ‘You really rock at ______.’
  7. ‘Thumbs up for ____.’

And the list goes on and on. The important part is the blank. Fill in that blank with exactly what behavior you are wanting to reinforce (and see more of in the future). An increase in desired behavior is a win-win-win for all parties! This is an easy way to achieve that.

This strategy has been long used and researched for classroom teachers. Parents can use it at home to see an increase in those desired behaviors, too! I couldn’t agree with her more. Use behavior-specific praise and tell your kiddos what you prize! Maybe they’ll even listen!

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