Monday, June 22, 2009

How to Avoid Interenet Addiction in Your Child

I can still remember the time when we parents were grateful and happy that we had Internet access finally, and that our children were about to become internet savvy!

We had dreams of our children becoming knowledgeable about everything there was to know, and we also thought that this would be a new way of keeping our children busy and engaged for long periods of time, away from outside dangers.



Little did we realize that our children would discover the internet in ways that we had not thought of, and that soon enough, they would become seriously addicted to the internet and on going online and chatting with friends, playing multi user games, entering pornographic sites and so on.



Today, most of us parents find it greatly difficult to balance our children’s online activities and their homework and studies and other extra curricular activities.



It is a fact that children and young adults can often become completely addicted to the internet and the wide possibilities that the internet would bring.



These are some of the psychological symptoms of internet addiction: euphoria at being online, an inability to stop the activity, lying to the family about chatting with strangers, and so on.



How does one go about avoiding such an addiction?

  • As a responsible parent, you must sit down and ask yourself: how is your child being affected by the internet. Does he suffer from psychological or physical symptoms? Are his studies getting adversely affected? Is he becoming uncommunicative at home? Are his relationships at home getting affected?
  • Do you think he may need counseling to help him get over his addiction? If so, don’t delay, act immediately. Experts state that internet addiction may be symptomatic of deeper lying psychological problems such as low self esteem or depression.
  • Are you sure that you are not addicted to the internet yourself? Remember; you are the most important role model for your child, and you need to be free of addiction before you advise your child to do so.
  • Set limits on your child’s internet usage everyday, and make sure that you enforce them, no matter what. Children must know how to follow a given set of rules, and they will be more disciplined than their peers.
  • Make sure that the computer is kept in a public place.
  • Try to enroll and engage your child in outdoor activities, so that he starts to lose interest in sitting in one place staring at the computer screen.

With patience and initiative, you will be able to cure your child of his internet addiction.



Source from http://www.theparentszone.com/parenting-skills/how-to-avoid-internet-addiction-in-your-child/

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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Don't Make Me Count to Three

Have you ever threatened your child with some dire consequence if you had to count to 3? You probably have, since most parents have.

Believe it or not, when done properly, counting can be an effective tool in the discipline arsenal.


But there are some things you must keep in mind.



First, never count except in whole numbers. Either a child’s act or failure to act is worth a whole number step up, or it isn’t. Do not get in the habit of counting by halves or quarters or any other fraction.



Second, be consistent. If you have established a consequence for a behavior, you must use it. If you do not, your child will know that counting is just talk. As with every type of discipline, your child must know that you are serious.



Third, do you know that you can be flexible. If your child behavior or actions warrant it, you can go back to a previous number. Say, for example, you began counting because your child hadn’t cleaned his room.



If your child does a really good job, you might go back to zero. You do not have to always start at one; certain infractions may be significant enough that you can begin the count at 2 or at a higher number depending on the level at which consequences ensue.



You can start over each time you count, or if you have to count a second time during the day, you can pick up where you left off. Just make sure your child knows the rules, and you apply them consistently.



Source from http://www.theparentszone.com/child-development/discipline/dont-make-me-count-to-3/

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