8 Ways to Raise a Moral Child
Raising a moral child means teaching your child to live by the Golden
Rule.Before your child can "treat others like you want others to treat
you," he has to learn how to empathize, to be able to think through an
action before doing it and to judge how the consequences of his action will
affect himself and others. Therein lies the basis of a moral person.
1. Raise kids who care
Attachment parenting is your child's first morality lesson.
Parents are the child's first morality teachers. Our own observations as well
as numerous studies conclude that attachment-parented infants are more likely
to become moral children and adults. The one quality that distinguishes these
children from kids raised in a detached parenting style is sensitivity. We view
sensitivity as the root virtue. Plant it in your child and watch it sprout
other virtues, such as self-control, compassion, and honesty. Here's how to
grow a sensitive child.
When a child spends the early years with a sensitive
caregiver, this infant develops an inner sense of rightness, a sense of well-being.
In short, he feels good. Being on the receiving end of this responsive style of
caring plants in the infant trust and eventually sensitivity. The child makes
these virtues part of himself. They are not something a child has, they are
what the child is, sensitive and trusting. He has learned it is good to help
and hold a person in need. He has a capacity to care, the ability to feel how
another person feels. He will be able to consider how his actions will affect
another person.
This inner code of behavior becomes deeply rooted in
connected children.As a result, they develop a healthy sense of guilt , feeling appropriately wrong when
they act wrong. To a connected kid, a lie is a breach of trust. When he slips,
his well-being is disturbed, so he strives to preserve and restore this sense
of moral balance. A connected child can truly do the right things for others
because others have done the right things for him.
The unconnected kid. The child who grows up with insensitivity becomes
insensitive. He has no frame of reference on how to act. Without an inner
guidance system, his values are subject to change according to his whims. One
difference between kids who care and kids who don't is their ability to feel
remorse, to be bothered by how their actions affect others. Criminologists have
noticed the most significant trait shared by unconnected kids and psychopathic
adults is their inability to feel remorse and empathy, and thus take
responsibility for their behavior.
A group of five-year-olds are playing and one of the
children falls, scrapes her knee and starts crying. The connected child will
offer a reassuring "I'm sorry you're hurt" and show a desire to
comfort. The unconnected child may say "cry baby."
2. Make a moral connection
The connected toddler
begins her moral development with the two fundamental qualities of sensitivity
and trust. These "starter virtues" make it easier for parents to
teach a toddler and preschooler the dos and don'ts of life. A morally-connected
parent appropriately points out to the child what's right, what's wrong, and
what's expected. The child trusts that whatever the parent says is gospel. If
Dad says hitting is wrong, it's wrong. If Mom says comforting a hurting child
is right, it's right. The parents are the trusted moral authorities.
The first six years is a window of opportunity when a
child unquestionably accepts the virtues modeled by parents. Consider what
happens when the child receives even one "morality lesson" each day
in the early years. For example, Ashley hurts her finger. "Let's help her
feel better." Your son takes his friend's ball. "Chris feels sad
because you took his favorite ball." Or "How would you feel if Chris
took your ball?"
Initially a child believes behaviors are right or wrong
because you tell her so, or she considers the consequences. By five years of
age your child begins to internalize your
values: what's right for you becomes right for her. Your values, virtuous or
not, become part of your child.
Between seven and ten the child enters the age of moral
reasoning. Now the child begins to act right because it is the right thing to
do. By seven years of age, most children have developed their concept of
"what's normal." If sensitivity, caring, politeness and empathy have
been standard operating procedure in the child's home, those are his norms, and
he operates according to them. What his parents take seriously, the child takes
seriously. Up to this point, he believes his parents to be infallible, so he
enters middle childhood with their values as part of himself.
Along come children with other "norms," who
grew up in insensitive, perhaps violent homes, with a distant parent-child
relationship. Here is where the morally-connected child shines. Because his
moral code is part of himself, the alternative values feel strange to him. They
upset his sense of well-being. He becomes morally selective, taking those
values which contribute to his well- being and discarding those that don't.
Not so the morally ungrounded child. He is the product of a home where virtues are not
discussed or taught and enters middle childhood like a ship without a rudder or
anchor. He drifts in a sea of moral uncertainty, prey to whatever influences
come along. Because he has no reference system to use as a standard, he adopts
others' values or he shifts values according to what's most convenient for
solving the problem of the moment. This child drifts into moral relativism : very few things are right or wrong,
black or white, but most solutions are shades of gray, and the child takes the
path of least resistance or the one that is most popular. This child is at risk
because he lacks connection with morally-grounded parents.
3. Model morals
A model is an example to
be imitated, for better or worse. In the early years children are totally
dependent on their caregivers to show the world to them. Your standards
automatically become theirs, because they soak up whatever surrounds them. They
make no independent judgments as to the rightness or wrongness of actions. Even
if you do something you've taught them is wrong, such as hit someone, they
assume you are right in what you did and the person you hit deserved it. If
they see and hear it from their parents, it's right, and they store this
behavior in their impressionable minds as something worth imitating.
After six or seven years of age the child begins to make
judgments about which models are worth emulating and incorporating into his
personality and which ones need to be discarded as threatening to his self.
This means parents must saturate their children with healthy models in the
preschool years, when children are most impressionable, so they can be
discerning about models that come along later.
Healthy modeling does not imply perfect parenting , based not on what is right and
wrong, but on what is convenient and expedient. Your child will pick up the way
of life that she sees you living daily at home. You will inspire your child to
follow your example, be it a valuable or a valueless model.
Besides providing healthy models at home, screen outside
influences that might leave unhealthy models in your child's mind. These
include substitute caregivers, neighbors, preschool teachers, older kids, and
television. Once upon a time persons of significance in a child's life came primarily from
within the extended family, but in today's mobile society a child is likely to
have a wider variety of models. Use these to your advantage and saturate your
child's environment with persons of significance who provide healthy examples so
that there is little room left for unhealthy messages.
4. Minimize bad
impressions
We emphasize models as one
of the prime influences on a child behavior. Parents need to realize that
negative behaviors viewed on TV (for
example, anger and violence) are easier for a child to copy than positive
behaviors (say, kindness). A few examples are all that is necessary to make a
lasting impression. Positive behaviors are more difficult to imitate because
they require maturity and self-control. These examples need to be repeated
often to sink in. Parents should not be lulled into a false sense of security
because their child has seen only "a few" violent movies.
Nevertheless, you can't control everything that goes into your child's mind. To
counteract the negative influences that slip in, saturate your child's mind
with examples of positive behavior. Also, beware of what we term "instant
replay." A child's developing mind is like a giant video library. He
stores all he sees for alter retrieval. If the child repeatedly witnesses
graphic scenes of violence, this topic gets lots of shelf space in the library
of his mind. So, years later when presented with similar circumstances, for
example, a rivalry over a girlfriend, the teen or adult instantly replays a
similar scene from his video library: He shoots the person who stole his
girlfriend. We wonder if the criminals that go berserk (translation:
"temporarily insane") and commit a hideous crime are, by reflex,
replaying what they were subconsciously programmed to do.
5. Teach your child to
think morally
Take advantage of
teachable moments , ordinary
events of family life that offer opportunities to talk your child through the
process of moral reasoning. One day I saw two eight-year-old neighborhood kids
perched on a hillside ready to toss water balloons on cars passing by below. I
nabbed them before their mischief began and began this dialogue with one of the
boys: "Jason, what do you think might happen when the water balloon hits
the car?" I asked. "It would splat all over the car," Jason
responded."Imagine if you were the driver, what do you think the driver
might feel?" I said."I dunno," Jason mumbled."Do you think
it might scare him?" I persisted."Yes, I guess so," admitted Jason."He
might be so startled that the car goes out of control, he drives up on a
sidewalk, and a little child goes splat. Isn't that possible?" I
offered."I guess so," he admitted."You would feel pretty bad if
that happened, wouldn't you?" I went on."Yes, I sure would,"
Jason agreed.
You can discuss people on TV in the same way. You notice your
ten-year-old watching a questionable TV program. Sit next to her and in a
nonthreatening and nonjudgmental way inquire, "Do you think what those
people are doing is right?" Encourage discussions about current events:
controversial sports figures, newspaper headlines, social issues. Raise your
children to express their opinions. Encourage lively family debates. Respect
their viewpoints even if you don't agree. Studies show that children who come
from families who encourage such open discussion are more likely to think
morally mature. A California study of a thousand college students looked at the
relationship between the student's level of moral reasoning and how they were
parented. Students who scored high on moral reasoning came from families that
encouraged open discussion of controversial topics. Other studies have shown
that highly-permissive parents
who did not expect obedience from their children and gave inappropriate praise
produced "me- firsters," children whose only thought was to satisfy
themselves. And the other extreme, over-controlling parents produced conformist
teenagers who couldn't think for themselves. In these studies, families who
gave their children a voice in decisions produced teenagers who were able to
reason morally. Getting children to preach to themselves becomes the most
lasting morality lesson.
Let your child hear you think through the rightness or
wrongness of an action. You and your child are at a store and the cashier gives
you too much change back. You notice the error and share it with your child:
"Oh, the cashier gave us too much money back." And then you offer a
moral commentary as if thinking out loud: "This extra money does not
belong to us. It would not be right to keep it. The cashier may be suspended or
lose her job for this mistake. I would feel bad if I kept the money..."
Your child justifies, "But Dad, everybody does it." You reply,
"Does that make it right? What do you believe is the right thing to do? How
do you think you would feel if you kept money that didn't belong to you?"
Then add, "I feel good doing the right thing and returning the
money."
6. Know your child
Know how your child is
thinking morally at each stage of development. When situations occur that
require a moral decision, involve your child in them. One day our ten-year-old
Erin and I were driving by a beggar. Erin said, "Dad, can we stop and give
him some money?" Taking her cue, I stopped the car for a teachable
opportunity. Testing where she was at morally I suggested, "Maybe he
should get a job." Erin answered, "Maybe he can't find one."
That told me where she was. We stopped at a nearby store and bought some food
for the needy person.
Morals are important to a child because they govern the
choices they make. If a child is self-centered, materialistic and lacks
empathy, she will often think of her own convenience first and take the path of
least resistance. If empathy is ingrained in her, she will make choices that
make her a better person to be with and society more caring.
7. Know your child's
friends
Parents, know the values
of your child's friends because some of these will rub off onto your child. One
day we witnessed a case of childhood blackmail. Nine-year-old Matthew was
playing with eight-year-old Billy who tried to blackmail Matthew into doing
something. He told Matt that he would not invite him to his birthday party if
he didn't do it. Matthew, a very sensitive and principled child, was visibly
bothered. We used this opportunity to talk to both children. We impressed on
Billy that this is not how children should treat each other. We also asked Matt
how he felt being on the receiving end of the blackmail. By learning what it
felt like to be treated like this, Matt's principles were reinforced. You can always
get positive mileage out of negative situations. Real life provides real
lessons.
In our zeal to convince our children of the wisdom of
moral living, there is a bit of missionary in all of us. Yet the older children
get the more they seem to tune out preaching. That's why teachable situations , such as those we mentioned above,
leave more lasting lessons than anything you say.
8. Send your child off to
school morally literate
Ground your child in your
moral values day in and day out, and continue to reinforce these values as long
as you have an influence on your child. You want your child to do what's right,
not just what's expedient in a given situation. To do this, he must act from
inner conviction built up over many years. Values don't stick if they are
tacked onto the child at the last minute, like a holiday decoration, or changed
like a piece of clothing, according to the fashion of the day.
Once children enter middle childhood (ages six through
ten), they are on the receiving end of tremendous peer pressure. If the child
does not have her own inner guidance system telling her which choice to make,
she will more readily become a victim of peer pressure . Children are searching for
principles. If a strong guidance system prevails at home and within children
themselves, they are likely to conform to their parents' and their own inner
morals. They become leaders among their peers instead of followers, setting
their own course, staying on it, and swimming upstream even when the prevailing
current is against them.
Teaching your child right from wrong must be done with
patience and care. Power or fear morality is not likely to stick because it
does not become a willing part of the child's self: "If I catch you
stealing again, I'll belt you even harder," yelled a dad who was
determined to teach his child right and wrong by the use of fear and force.
This child is more likely to spend his energy figuring out how he can avoid
getting caught than in moral reasoning about the rightness or wrongness of the
act.
One of the goals in raising moral children is to turn out
moral citizens. The family is a mini society where a child learns how to live
with others and to respect authority. Children who operate with inner controls
and not out of fear of punishment make morality a part of themselves. They have
a balanced view of authority: they respect authority figures but do not accept
others' values unquestioningly. If the laws are not serving the interests of
the people, they'll be the ones leading the charge to throw out the lawmakers
and elect new ones. Raising kids who care is the first step in maintaining a
moral society.
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