Raising Cooperative Kids. Marion S. Forgatch
between thousands of parents and their children, we have found that the most important factor successful families have in common is a spirit of cooperation. The parenting techniques we have developed instill cooperation in children; they tap deep-rooted human instincts that are universal across cultural and economic lines. Whether you are rich, or poor, or middle-class; whether you live on a farm, in the suburbs, or in the city; whether you are black, brown, or white—the cooperative spirit is the same.
Our research reveals that cooperation is the keystone that makes the essential building blocks of children's behavior fall into place. Our parenting techniques, embraced so far by thousands of families, enable parents to teach their children new behaviors while promoting a home environment with few family conflicts. Cooperation, which parents must teach to their children, is the foundation of healthy child development.
Now, you may wonder: What do we mean by “cooperative children?”
Cooperative children pay attention; they follow rules, and work and play well with others. With siblings and peers, they share, take turns, and are good sports whether they win or lose. With adults—parents, teachers, and coaches—cooperative children willingly follow directions. Willingness is an essential distinction here. It's one thing when children behave out of fear of being punished. It's quite another when they want to follow your directions and get along with others rather than argue, refuse, and create conflicts. Cooperation, which most children are eager to learn, opens new dimensions of family life. It's the secret sauce that makes parenting a joy.
Cooperative children enjoy pleasing others without being so-called people pleasers. Following directions seems to come naturally to them most of the time. That cooperative spirit then generates harmonious teamwork that spreads throughout the family. We have conducted studies to learn what parents do to promote cooperation in their children. This book shares what we have learned from our research.
That research began about fifty years ago when Jerry read studies reporting that the traditional talk and play therapies he had so carefully learned to use did not change children's behavior. The traditional approach was to work directly with children while their parents sat patiently in the waiting room hoping that magic would take place. After these sessions, parents brought their children home knowing little about what had just transpired and knowing even less about what to do to follow up. Jerry decided to try something new.
A scientist to his core, Jerry began by watching how parents and children behave with each other. He visited the homes of families with well-adjusted children and families struggling with behavior problems. He sat quietly in the corners of their homes, observing their everyday lives, writing down what the parents did and how the children reacted, and how the parents reacted in turn. He wanted to understand why some children are cooperative and well-behaved while others are antagonistic and get into trouble. And he wanted to know the role that parents play in that interaction. I joined him in his studies in the 1970s, and together we have developed and tested a set of parenting techniques that help families change. We have seen that the parenting practices we describe in this book promote children's cooperation. In turn, that helps them get along better with siblings at home, follow parents' directions, learn routines and new behaviors, and do well in school and out in the community. Parents benefit by being less stressed and happier in their relationships at home and at work. A landmark study of single mothers who used our techniques found that they even became more successful financially.
This book draws from our decades of research into what parents can do to make things better—and what factors make things worse. We have formulated our parenting practices into simple strategies that are easy to follow. Each chapter presents at least one such strategy, and we have provided a list of them at the end of the book so you can easily refer to them. Make sure, as you apply them, that you include all the elements and follow them in the suggested sequence. Properly applied, these strategies promote a cooperative spirit in children.
Our Methods
To make sure that our strategies work, we tested them using what is called randomized controlled trials. That is the same rigorous approach the medical profession uses to determine whether or not a drug or procedure is effective. In our trials, we randomly assigned some parents to receive our techniques while others were assigned to receive treatment as usual or no treatment. We tested families before and after the intervention period, and for follow-up periods from months to years. Then we compared the outcomes for the different randomized groups. This is the way to be objective and discover whether a treatment or technique works. You can learn about our studies at www.isii.net or at www.oslc.org.
The success of our evidence-based parenting methods has attracted attention worldwide. With demand for our parenting approach increasing rapidly, I established Implementation Sciences International, Inc. (ISII) in 2001 to separate the ongoing research at our research center, called the Oregon Social Learning Center (OSLC), from the tasks of training practitioners in our methods, writing manuals for practitioners and parents, and handling the logistics for launching our ever-growing programs. Today, demand is greater than we can meet, so we decided to write this book to make our techniques available to as many parents as possible.
Because we have carefully tested our methods and subjected our findings to independent review by other scientists, you can be confident that they work. Our group at OSLC has published more than 1,000 papers in peer-reviewed professional journals and contributed dozens of chapters in academic books. Jerry's published work on “coercion theory” and parenting has been cited more than 50,000 times by other scientists. The fields of psychology, sociology, and criminology have adopted Jerry's coercion theory as an underlying explanation for children's behavior problems.
Studies show that the parenting strategies we recommend are successful in promoting children's healthy adjustment and preventing problems from developing. The same techniques also reduce or eliminate problems that are already present.
We wrote this book to share what we have learned so you can create the family you will love to love. This book is a journey we take together. Be sure to follow our road map through each chapter and don't jump ahead. The ground you cover in one chapter sets you up to find your way through the next. You will enhance your success at building new skills if you do the exercises in the order presented, chapter by chapter. Each exercise builds on the previous one; in the end, all the skills link together to create strong, confident parents.
Each chapter ends with a practice assignment that gives you the opportunity to try our strategies and adjust them to fit your values and goals as parents, as well as your children's temperament, age, developmental stage, personal interests, and talents. In some chapters, we have added a section called What Do Parents Say? That section provides comments made by real parents—some praising the parenting strategies, others raising questions about how to use them.
Family living is often like an intricate dance in which family members learn to move in synchrony with each other. We describe this complicated choreography, then use family scenarios to help you tailor our strategies to the needs of you and your children. Because all families get out of synch and sometimes step on each other's toes, we show families experiencing problems based on actual circumstances we have observed (and experienced ourselves) over the years. Then we “rewind” the situation and play out the scenario again, following the techniques introduced in that chapter.
Because today's families are so diverse, we describe different family structures (two-parent, single-parent, and blended families) with children of differing ages and genders. As you read the scenarios, try to imagine your family in the situation. After you have tried out a strategy, you can adjust it to suit your family members' individual needs and circumstances. For example, the kinds of praise you use to encourage your two-year-old will differ from the way you praise your twelve-year-old.
While our techniques are appropriate for children of all ages, this book will be most helpful for parents of children from toddlerhood through the tween years, when children are most open to learning from you. You will probably need some additional approaches to address the issues that arise during the teen years. Our