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Table of Contents
June 2005
Issue Home
The Three Keys to Greatness
Can Your Weight Hinder Your Chances to Find a
Job?
Change Begins With Choice
Breaking Teens’ Bad Habits
Can You Explain The Time Value of Money Concept?
Face Your Deck Chair Forward
FSS Trivia
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Positive Parenting: Breaking Teens’ Bad
Habits
Parents play a major role in their teens' behavior and have
the ability to be both loving and firm as they establish
guidelines for safe and respectful living. Dr. Phil and Jay
offer suggestions for what parents can do to help their teens
break their bad habits.
- Set clear boundaries.
Establish clear boundaries that cannot be crossed and then
stick to them. If you tell your teen that she will be
punished if she breaks her curfew, be sure to live up to it.
- Plug into your teen's life.
Be aware of who your teenager is hanging out with, monitor
her progress in school, and notice any changes in her
behavior that could be related to drug or alcohol use.
- Negotiate.
Sit down with your teen and negotiate a set of rules and
regulations that are realistic and that you can both live up
to. Enlist the help of a third party if necessary.
- Discuss, don't scream.
Aggressive behavior is easy to tune out. Speak to your teen
like he's an adult and he may act like one.
- Forget "cool."
Your job as a parent is not to be a cool friend, but to set
up boundaries in which your teen can comfortably grow.
- Reward your teen for positive behavior.
Being a troubled teen is not a lifetime sentence. When your
teen makes the effort to break a negative pattern of
behavior, be sure to acknowledge the change by giving him
more freedom and showing him that it is possible to rebuild
trust. This positive reinforcement will encourage him to
keep up the good work
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