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The Case Against Time-out
by Peter Haiman, Ph.D.
For generations, parents have sought a reliable and dependable way to
handle childhood misbehavior. The most recent and popular discipline
technique is time-out. Although time-out is better than spanking, it is
not an appropriate way for parents to cope with the misbehavior of their
children. Moreover, the use of time-out can create subsequent childhood
behavior problems. These problems can affect the well-being of the child
and severely strain the parent-child relationship.
Child Behavior - A Symptom
The behavior of children has a legitimate cause. Childhood behavior
is determined, for the most part, by how children feel about the current
state of their physical and psychosocial needs. Needs are strong in
every child, and children are, by nature, sensitive to their own needs.
If one or more of their needs are not met, children will soon feel
uncomfortable.
Children will cry out when they feel uncomfortable. An infant or
toddler's cry announces feelings of frustration. These cries have
evolved as a survival mechanism. They attract parental attention. The
purpose of a cry is to obtain the kind and quality of parental love and
care that will properly attend to unmet needs and, therefore, establish
feelings of security in the child. The misbehavior of older children and
adolescents is a cry for help announcing that their needs are
frustrated.
Cries and misbehavior from children and adolescents are, in a way,
very much like a sore throat, stuffed up nose, aching muscles, or a
fever. All are symptoms. All have causes. A medical practitioner knows
that when the virus or bacteria that is causing physical symptoms is
eliminated, the noxious feelings will be quelled. Similarly, when
parents correctly diagnose and provide remedies that address the needs
of children and adolescents, the symptoms of crying or misbehavior will
also disappear.
The frustration of important needs does not feel good at any age.
However, children can become quite upset and demanding when their needs
are not met. Their often intense outbursts stem, in part, from their
dependent nature. Unlike most adults, young children lack the ability to
meet their own needs. They are physically unable to do most self-care
tasks. By nature, they also have strong emotional needs and
vulnerabilities. Moreover, unlike most adults, young children are unable
to tolerate frustration well. In addition, infants, toddlers, and many
preschool-aged children are unable to identify the frustrated needs that
are making them upset. This makes it impossible for most young children
to tell their parents what is bothering them and why they are often
unable independently to get their needs fulfilled.
Time-out
When time-out is used, parents first firmly demand that their child
stop misbehaving and be quiet. The child is then usually required to go
and sit alone in a room, away from parents, and admonished not to come
out of the room until they are sure that they can control their
behavior. Being placed in time-out prolongs the time that a child must
endure the frustrated need that caused their misbehavior. Thus, unmet
normal needs become increasingly uncomfortable as the time-out
continues. Young children depend upon, want to be with, love, and need
their parents.
What exacerbates this increasingly uncomfortable state of being
frustrated is the fact that the child must be alone, away from the
parents who they must rely upon to meet their needs, This enforced
separation from their basic source of comfort, security, and well-being
adds considerably to the woe of a child. Moreover, being alone in
time-out can create additional disturbing feelings that the child must
endure. Painful emotions like fear and worry often develop. A frustrated
child who must sit quietly and alone in time-out frequently becomes
angry. Although the youngster dare not express this anger when in
time-out, the child often expresses it by becoming angry and defiant
sometime after being released from time-out. The practice of separating
a child in time-out from parents can in itself become the cause of
future misbehavior, because being alone and in time-out increases the
frustrations felt by a child who is already frustrated.
Interpersonal dilemmas and conflicts are best resolved when each
individual has sufficient opportunity to talk to and be heard by the
other person. Modeling, initiating, and practicing the process of open
dialogue is essential if a youngster is to learn healthy problem
solving. Does time-out lend itself to this process? Helping children
talk about how they feel, combined with parental patience, is required
if children are to develop the ability to verbalize their feelings and
needs rather than act them out.
Lifelong Effects of Frequent Time-out
For the frustrated and uncomfortable child, time-out offers enforced
silence and the feeling of being rejected by one's parents. A youngster
who misbehaves and then is given time-out feels hurt. This hurt,
combined with the frustration that caused the youngster to misbehave,
gives birth to anger. And discipline practices like time-out, which
create hurt and anger, can harm a child.
A serious cost of being given time-out in childhood is the lesson
that one should bottle up uncomfortable emotions. Upset in time-out and
unable to express distressing feelings, youngsters desperately need to
stop the painful feelings going on inside them. To cope, children learn
to ignore and/or distract themselves from the energy of their hurt and
angry feelings. Thus, children learn to repress their painful feelings.
In the process, nervous habits emerge such as thumb sticking, fingernail
biting, hair pulling, skin scratching, tugging at clothes,
self-pinching, and many other similar behaviors. The purpose of these
behaviors is to ward off uncomfortable feelings and, in identification
with their parents' criticism of them, to punish themselves. These
defense strategies serve to release anger and ignore uncomfortable
feelings.
As a result, being unaware of true feelings can often become a
characteristic feature of a person's life. This reduces a person's
self-awareness and can affect the quality of life throughout an entire
lifetime.
Developing the Well-behaved Child
Parents can develop a well-behaved, self-disciplined child best by
responsively and continuously meeting their child's developmentally
normal needs and drives; by demonstrating and articulating humane values
in day-to-day interactions with their youngster; and by exposing their
child to life experiences that strengthen and reinforce these values.
Troubled and spoiled children are created when parents do not meet their
child's normal needs and drives consistently and appropriately.
What are the basic, normal childhood needs? If a child is physically
healthy, well nourished, satisfactorily exercised, and not tired, the
youngster's physical needs are being met. A youngster who has received
sufficient and continuous satisfying attention, affection, and
recognition from parents and other adults and children to whom the child
is emotionally attached, the child's social and emotional needs are
fulfilled. If a child's normal curiosity, exploratory nature, and
intrinsic interests are regularly allowed opportunities to unfold and
develop, the intellectual needs of that child will be satisfied. When
young children are given opportunities, within a securely supportive and
trustworthy environment, to become increasingly more independent, make
choices, and meaningfully participate in decision making, their normal
need to exercise some control over their life and to express their own
will are being appropriately addressed.
It is very important for parents and parents-to-be to learn the
developmentally normal characteristics' of each stage of early human
development. It is also important to recognize a virulent myth that
still exists in our society: that fully meeting a child's needs will
spoil the child. The research literature clearly says that the opposite
is true. The well-disciplined child is created when parents
appropriately fulfill the needs of childhood and adolescence.
Dr. Peter
Haiman has been a childrearing consultant for over 30
years. He developed and administered a nationally recognized parent and
child center in Cleveland, Ohio, and also served as chairman of the
Department of Child Development and Early Childhood Education at the
University of South Carolina.
This article was first published in the
May-June 1998 issue of Mothering. It is reprinted here with
permission from the author and the editors. |