The ABC Guide -A-Action

The ABC Guide - A-Antecedent
ABC Guide -A-Action
The ABC Guide – A-Antecedent

ABC Guide -A-Action , helps you understand your child’s behavior, customize your reaction and determine if your parenting styles for discipline are working.  When the kid is constantly answering your requests with “but I wasn’t. . .” or “he started it. . .” or “you’re so mean!” then guess what?  We’re not the least bit effective.  It’s a kick in the gut, I know, but responses like that mean our discipline methods stink and need to change!

The ABC guide and associated lingo can get annoying sometimes, but you have to understand the foundation.  We’re changing the way we think, so we have to wrap our brains around why.  

Why do kids have smart mouth comebacks, why do we get so worked up, and why is it important to change?  So hold your horses my friend!  Let’s take a couple of chapters to learn the basics and vocabulary first.  It’s easy enough once you get it.  Then we can move on to specific methods to decrease the unwanted behavior.

ABC Guide -A-Action 

Briefly, ABC stands for:

  • A = Antecedent:    The action immediately before the (good or bad) behavior.
  • B = Behavior:         What exactly the kid does and why.
  • C = Consequence: What happens immediately after the behavior.

Now let’s examine this in detail.

A = Antecedent

‘A’  is the event that happens right before the behavior.  Behavior can be desirable or undesirable.  Good or bad.   ‘A’ is the action or thing that causes the good or bad behavior.  Most often it’s requests, actions, or commands from us such as, “I told you not to do that”;  “Turn the computer off, please”;  “Hurry up”;  “Your room still isn’t clean”; etc.

Analyzing the antecedent includes three factors:

1) Identify  ‘A’

What did you say?  What did you do?  What was your child doing?  Figure out your setup.  If the resulting behavior was good, mark it.  Approach it that way again in the future.  If the behavior was bad, avoid that setup.  For example, your kid keeps leaving clothes on the floor in the morning, driving you bonkers.  

Your approach is to yell as soon as you see the clothes.  The response is always a put off: “I’ll get it later,” or “I’m doing something right now,” or back talk, “It’s my room, I can leave it how I want!”  So think about when and where you’re making the request.  Are you in a rush to get to work or school?

 Is the kid distracted, playing a game, or in the middle of another task?  If so, you have to wait until he is focused on you and neither of you are rushed, distracted, or annoyed.

2) Set Crystal-Clear Directions and Expectations

Put simply, it’s our job to make sure we give crystal-clear directions, examples, and expectations in order to get a successful outcome.  We cannot be vague. “Clean your room” can mean one thing to you and something totally different to your kid.  Be specific! “Pick up these clothes.  Put the dirty ones in the laundry and clean ones in the drawer.  Game pieces go in the game box and the game box goes under your bed.”  Break it down into parts and tell them exactly what you want. Write it down if needed.  That way there’s no miscommunication (“But you said I could ……..”)

Give your child very specific directions and guidance so he understands exactly how you want him to behave.  If you don’t tell him what you want, he won’t know.  The behavior will then continue or become worse.

Don’t use isolated, abstract commands: “Cut it out”;   “Stop that, young man”;  “Don’t argue” or  “Enough!” Seriously, you may think kids have a clue as to what you mean, but they aren’t mind readers.  TELL them what you want!  Use specific actions.  For example, for the younger kids, “Cut it out” can mean:

  • Quiet hands –> Use kind words
  • Quiet mouth –> Bottom on the chair, feet on the floor
  • Say please –> Walk beside me
  • Say thank you –> Hands to yourself

“Cut it out” is too vague.  Avoid fuzzy words!  Be clear and teach your child exactly what behavior you want to see. Think about what you WANT.  Be specific and stop telling your child what you don’t want” because that’s a negative.

Here are some examples:

  •   What We Want –> What We Don’t Want
  •   Quiet feet –> No running!
  •   Inside voice –> Stop yelling!
  •   Bottom on the chair –> Quit wiggling!
  •   Food goes in your mouth –> Don’t throw that!
  •   Stay with me –> Don’t run off!
  •   Hands to yourself –> Leave your brother alone!
  •   Four on the floor [chair legs] –> Don’t tilt your chair back! 

See what I mean?  Focus on what you WANT your child to do.  When you always say, “Stop it”  or  “No”  or  “Cut it out,”    (a) it points out the negative, and    (b) it is not specific.   It doesn’t tell them what you want to see instead. And if you don’t tell them what you want, how can you expect them to do it?

3) External Factors

Under  “A”  you also examine external factors such as lack of sleep, distractions, hunger/thirst, etc.  You know your child, so use this information to avoid conflicts and misunderstandings.

For example, your kid is being a crank-pot, but you need help setting the table for dinner.  So you ask nicely and they give you lip.  Avoid barking back, “Don’t you argue with me!   Get over here and help!”  Instead, check yourself. Remember that you’ve been racing the poor kid all over town that week for art class, soccer and piano and he’s still got forty-five minutes of homework to do.  He’s a little stressed and tired!  The expectation doesn’t change – he is still going to help set the table.  You just don’t need to be a tyrant about it and neither does he.  So go over, offer a hand, and say, “Here, I’ll help you.”  

Someone walking in off the street might call you a pushover for tolerating that nonsense, but you understand the day and week the kid is going through, and factor that in.  You know for darn sure that yelling or forcing the kid to obey ‘just because’ will get you nowhere, so go about it a different way to get a positive result.

Dealing with Children’s Aggressive Behavior

Dealing with Children's Aggressive Behavior
Dealing with Children's Aggressive Behavior
Aggressive Behavior

Well, I can joke around about the whining, but dealing with children’s aggressive behavior is a different ball game. With aggression, it’s time to get serious.

If your child is acting aggressive, you must get back to the ABC basics. This behavior is not age appropriate and needs to stop. By the time they reach kindergarten, the tantrums, hitting, kicking, and attempts at aggression should absolutely be gone. In fact, I rarely see aggression in these kids unless it’s attached to a diagnosis of some sort, or it’s modeled in the home.

There may be the stray spoiled or immature (possibly born premature) child who will throw a fit or take a swing here and there, but whatever the reason, it should not be tolerated.

Dealing with Children’s Aggressive Behavior – ABC

ABC each situation and look at motivating factors. When the kid hits, he does NOT get what he wants. Period. End of story. Give him the opposite. Figure out what is going to (P) punish.

Look at how you are reinforcing the aggression and stop. The behavior is coming from somewhere and many times we have no earthly idea that we are reinforcing behavior we don’t want to see.

A woman recently wrote to me that her child was being aggressive on the school bus and the driver was threatening to kick her off. I told her that something was reinforcing the behavior.  Someone had been letting her get away with this, and now it was out of control. 

To address the behavior on the bus, she needed to first make sure she was totally on top of her child at home.  That behavior does NOT get reinforced.  Meaning, do NOT give her what she wants.  She gets no attention, no talking, no feedback.  Put her in a time-out if need be and make sure she gets no attention while she’s there. 

Do not engage the behavior (“Honey, what’s wrong?” “Why are you kicking?” “Cut it out”). When you start a discussion with her on the behavior, you are engaging.

So don’t do it. She goes to time-out or to her room (unless that’s what she wants. . . in which case she does not get to go there), or you walk away.

If she’s throwing a fit and being aggressive because she doesn’t want to do something, then by golly, make sure she does it. If you give in at all and don’t make her do it, you reinforce the aggression. It works, and she’ll do it again.  So when she’s finished with the tantrum, she still has to do the task. Period.

Just remember to let the kid calm down first. Most of the time, especially when children flip out and go into hyper-tantrum, we don’t let them finish and calm down on their own.

We get too busy going into lecture mode. Then we don’t go through with our consequence, we don’t make them complete the task that spurred the aggression, and we effectively reinforce the darn tantrum. It’s rather useless. So follow through with your consequences, and make sure the child does what was originally asked.