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Articles About
Sibling Fighting
If you have
more than one child, sibling fighting is probably all to
familiar to you. In these articles about sibling
fighting, you will learn more about what you can do to help
your kids resolve their conflicts.
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Sibling Fighting - Teach Our Kids to Resolve Conflict Peacefully
After 18 years of working with
parents and families I have finally worked out the cause of sibling
fighting.
Having more than one child.
Sibling fighting tends to come with the parenting territory. It is
born from rivalry or competitiveness between siblings and shows
itself through mindless arguments, noisy squabbles, physical means,
verbal put-downs and even long silences.
Kids have L plates on when it comes to resolving conflict with their
siblings. They can learn better ways of resolving conflict than
resorting to reflexive means such as hitting, shouting and generally
playing the person rather than the “ball”.
The key is to help children focus on the problem not their sibling.
As a parent it is difficult to know how to respond when kids
squabble, fight or argue. Do I ignore the squabble or do I become
involved? Good question. Bear it (if you are a saint you maybe able
to ignore it), Beat it (go elsewhere when they fight) and Boot them
out (noisy disputes are best settled outside) come from the
let-them-work-it-out-themselves school of thought. There is a time
and place for this approach.
But kids also at times regardless of their age need some positive
parental input into resolving issues. Here are some ideas for you to
think about:
- Focus
on emotions first. Emotional containment is a
priority here. Get kids to calm down before you help them work
their problems. This may mean they sit for a while on their own
or go outside and let off steam physically. Once emotions are
contained then you can get down to business.
- Focus
on the problem not the fight. Kids will want parents
to punish their sibling for beginning a dispute or infringing on
their rights. Drill down onto the issue (e.g. a better way of
watching TV, sharing toys or whatever) and focus on resolving
that. Direct children to focus on the issue not the fight.
-
Listen to their story. Kids generally want to be
heard so listen to their side of the story and again, try
focusing on how they feel about it. Give their emotions a name
or label. “It sounds like you are pretty angry about it. Would I
be right?” Sometimes this is enough to get a resolution to an
issue. “Okay you can play with my old toys but I don’t want you
playing with my new toys for a while. They’re special.” “Okay.”
- State
the problem as you see it. When kids are stuck tell
the problem as you see it. Try to develop a sense of ‘other’
here by showing how a child’s behavior affected his or her
sibling, without using shaming or blaming. If you can brainstorm
a solution so be it. Otherwise they can agree to disagree and
stay clear of each other.
-
Restore the relationship. Keep the relationship as
the focus rather than focusing on the problem. With young
children the issue they were fighting about is generally
long-gone by the time a parent intervenes. An apology, a hug, a
joint treat (and no I am not suggesting rewarding poor behavior
) or redirecting kids’ attention elsewhere are some ways to help
restore the relationship between the kids.
Conflict resolution sounds easy
on paper but it is hard to do in practice. Helping children
resolve disputes is one of life’s most difficult tasks – ask any
teacher and they will tell you playground squabbles are the
hardest things to deal with. (Not to mention the children’s
squabbles!!!)
Be smart. Choose your times to help kids out. Don’t respond
reflexively to kids’ telling tales or you will soon join in the
sibling dance. Look for opportunities to help children to
resolve disputes by focusing on the problem, not the person.
Oh, and don’t forget to model good conflict resolution yourself.
Your kids are watching and learning from you!
Michael Grose is a popular parenting educator and parent coach.
He is the director of Parentingideas, the author of seven books
for parents and a popular presenter who speaks to audiences in
Australia, Singapore and the USA. For ideas and resources to
help deal with sibling fighting and other behaviour issues visit
http://parentingideas.oandc.com.au/pishop/index.php?cPath=21_40
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