Parents can help their kids feel that they can reach goals they've
set for
themselves with effort, perseverance, and just a little patience.
From
PARENTS magazine, here are 7 ways to
help your youngster do their best.
1. Support their efforts. Listen to your child's dreams, goals, and
ideas
and help him to work out the steps of those that seem attainable by
organizing them into do-able parts.
2. Encourage follow-through. Praise task completion and encourage
them to
carry on when the initial excitement fades. Relate your struggles to
complete tasks and your satisfaction at having achieved a goal.
3. Offer reinforcement or reward. Give incentive for better efforts,
not
just accomplishments. Keep a chart with stars tracking progress and
reward
the task's completion, not its grade. Younger children need quicker
rewards
and briefer tasks.
4. Recognize his success level. When a child reaches a point of
frustration,
learning specialists advocate you help him return to a level where
he feels
successful. Then his enthusiasm will return.
5. Involve others. Tell teachers and coaches that it's more
important to you
that your child feel successful than to come out on top. Making your
values
clear to them can make them more effective in helping your child.
6. Point out effort in others. Make your child aware of how others
work hard
at their daily activities, so they know they're not alone in trying,
overcoming discouragement, meeting challenges, and succeeding.
7. Praise him for trying. Point out how much you appreciate your
child's
doing something that may be difficult for him.
Applied to schoolwork, swimming, or other pursuits, these devices
can help
kids develop a "can-do" attitude.