We know that responding to your child’s behaviour in the Early Years might be challenging from time to time – take a look at Dr Nicola Canale’s seven tips (adapted from Dr Kim Golding’s work) on how you can respond to your child’s behaviours.
The Seven C’s of Responding to Behaviour Dr Nicola Canale, 2020 (Adapted from Parenting in the Moment © Kim S. Golding, 2015)
Step 1
Clock it: Noticing and stepping in early is key. Do you need to step in or can you choose to ignore the behaviour and distract the child if behaviour is not causing any harm?
Step 2
Calm yourself: Check whether you are feeling calm and in control of your own emotions. You may need to take five deep breaths. It’s important to calm yourself first so that you are able to respond instead of react.
Step 3
Calm your child: If your child has ‘flipped their lid’, they will need your help to calm down. Every child is unique. You as their parent will know what best helps them calm. Some children like to be hugged and others may need a bit of space with you sitting nearby to help them calm down.
Step 4
Be Curious: Be curious about some of the underlying emotions or needs that would explain why your child is behaving in this way. A useful acronym to remember in the Early Years is H.A.L.T. HALT stands for hungry, angry, lonely, tired. Are any of these needs unmet? Could this be the cause of their behaviour?
Step 5
Connect: Join the dots for your child. Connect the underlying emotion or need to the behaviour you are seeing for example “I think you are tired, let’s put the toys away and have a rest.” Connecting your child’s emotion or need to their behaviour helps them to feel understood and soothed and will also help to develop their self-regulation skills.
Step 6
Correction: This is where you will provide a limit or boundary around the behaviour and decide whether an age appropriate consequence is necessary. At this age a consequence needs to be immediate and relevant to the child for example “you hurt your sister with the toy, the toy is going away”. With younger children you do not necessarily need to put another consequence in place if a natural consequence to the behaviour has already taken place for example “you wouldn’t put your wellies on so there is not enough time to go to the park sorry”.
Step 7
Connect again: Once you’ve set down the limit, boundary or consequence, and stuck to it, don’t revisit the behaviour at a later time in the day, be like Elsa and ‘let it go’. Your chid will recover from these little ruptures, and will learn from them, and your relationship will remain strong.