Limits
Problem Solving
Meaningful Feedback
Encouragement/ Mistaken Goals
More Helpful Behavior
100

Children help teachers to develop these boundaries in a classroom

Limits

100

Conflict Resolution is

Problem Solving

100

Teachers giving the child helpful information

Meaningful Feedback

100

A child seeks power, undue attention, revenge, and demonstrates inadequacy to accomplish this.

mistaken goals

100

modeling is an effective way to teach children this kind of behavior

helpful behavior

200

Teachers avoid giving this to children when it's not an option

choice

200

Identifying a conflict should be done in this way

nonaccusatory

200

Somthing to avoid when giving meaningful feedback

empty praise

200

Ignore this impulse when dealing with attention seeking behaviors

Giving in

200

first step in teaching more helpful behavior

observe

300

State multiple limits at a time

chain of limits

300

Teachers invite children to participate in this part of problem solving

fixing the problem

300

express this in relation to a child's effort or interest

appreciation

300

resist this impulse when reacting to a child who seeks power

Fighting back

300

what to do with the behavior causing problems for the child

identify it

400

Give limits again only when necessary or appropriate

Restate limits

400
Ideas that can solve the problem

solutions

400

feedback should help children with developing this

skills

400

Help a child who seeks revenge change this

View/self esteem

400

identify this to help the child

a skill

500

This is a very important part of limits and should be included as much as possible.

positivity

500

Teacher does this after the problem is solved

Follow up

500

Even though the child has not done anything, give this kind of feedback.

Unconditional

500

Encouraging a child who demonstrates inadequacy helps them develop this

competence

500

an effective way to teach more appropriate behavior

Model

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