Should we use a smiley chart to reward/punish our toddler?
Possible Duplicate:
How to operate a successful “Star Chart”?
Our nanny came up with an idea today to create a sort of table for our daughter, where they would draw a sun or smiley when my daughter behaves well and a sad face otherwise. Then we (the parents) would discuss the table with our daughter, offer her some sort of reward when there are many smileys, and explain that we are upset when there are many sad faces.
Does it make sense? Are there any risks with this kind of approach?
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My local nursery gives the kids a sticker if they were very good that day, but even at 4 years old they can have difficulty understanding the cumulative total. ie they are very happy to get a sticker for a good day, and may understand the fact they have a lot of stickers but not tie that back to the difference between 4 good days and eight good days.
This will sound like a cop-out but I'm a firm believer that you have to treat each kid as uniquely different. For some kids, maybe even most kids, sticker charts might not work, or might even be harmful. But then there's that one kid, for which it is the perfect solution.
Experiment, but don't push too hard, esp. with strong willed children. If they find it "fun" that is a good sign, if it seems tedious or if they get upset or confused by it, move on to some other idea. Ultimately parenting is more art than science...
We had to hospitalize my son for a week due to breathing problems when he was 4. He dreaded the needles and other painful procedures and put up an awful commotion. After a particularly bad episode the nurse suggested a sticker chart to reward him for each time they had to do something scary. My wife and I were skeptical but went along, and it worked remarkably well. He eventually even looked forward to procedures and took pride in getting his chart filled in.
We've gone on to adopt similar systems when we've hit motivational roadblocks on other behavioral or scholastic challenges. Make a reasonable deal with him, and he'll keep up his end of the bargain if you do.
But this works for him. Maybe he's a future capitalist, I don't know. He's quite competitive and loves measuring his progress at stuff. The same techniques don't work with his sister, or at least, not for the same reason. For her, she enjoys doing the task more than getting the rewards, it's the experience of doing that drives her. She loves games, and isn't quite as hung up on winning. She participates in the token systems to have the sense of inclusion, but it's fairly useless as a motivator, for her.
I can easily imagine that a different child, or a different combination of child and sibling or child and parent, would produce quite different results.
Also, there's a few different ways to do sticker or token systems, and again one approach might work better for one kid than another. Experiment and observe - keep your first "prototype" simple or even treat it as a game, and see how your child takes to it. Build and adapt.
I think what you're looking for is covered here: How to operate a successful “Star Chart”?
I think that topic covers the same ideas and aspects - though admittedly at two years old, your child can't actively participate in formulating the goals, but in my opinion the rest remains valid.
I'm not sure if your nanny's idea is really effective to use with a two-year-old but I can see how it can be a useful tool between the nanny and the parents.
I would have serious reservations about such a system. As TorbenGB mentioned, it might be a useful tool for you to communicate with the nanny, but young children have difficulty associating negative (or positive) reinforcement with behavior that did not immediately precede the reinforcement.
Your daughter may have a great deal of difficulty connecting discussion of smiley/frowney faces at the end of the week (or even at the end of the day) with any behavior that prompted the nanny to give the stickers (IMO I'm understating it by saying "great deal of difficulty").
I think the nanny's idea is basically a good one. A slightly better approach may be to reward your daughter for good behavior with smiley faces or happy stickers, and to ignore or not dwell on negative behavior. Children like attention whether negative or positive, and it is often wiser to not reinforce negative behavior.
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