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  • Will Quit for Cash

     

     

    I've been known to dangle incentives in front of my kids to get them to do otherwise unpleasant things (see: Let's Make a Deal ). So if they should ever make the foolhardy decision to smoke (as I did), I'll be right there, cash in hand, offering whatever it takes to get them to stop.

    According to one study, that amount is $750.

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    Posted Feb 18 2009, 10:30 AM by KeriF with | with 1 comment(s)
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  • World's Best Mom - Not!

     

    Sure, people reward mother’s with such titles as Mom of the Year and mugs with World’s Best Mom! But how about Worst Mom of the Year or a cup engraved with My Mom Sucks? Well for the My Mom Sucks category, 43 year old Tracy Holt is a worthy contender. What makes her parenting skills in regards to her 13-year old so questionable?

     

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  • Babble Talk: Is Child Bribery Bad?

    In this week's Bad Parent installment, Keri Fisher raises an important question: Is it bad to bribe our kids to encourage good behavior? As Keri's essay points out, everyone has an opinion on the subject. Some think that a little harmless quid pro quo -- "If you eat your vegetables, you get some ice cream" -- is no big deal. Others, like Kathy Waugh, see it as evidence of our "mercenary, gimme-gimme-gimme culture." And then there's Keri's mom, who believes that rewarding a child for doing what he should have done in the first place is akin to ceding control to the little bugger.

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  • Pay for Grades? Yes, You Should!

    money coinsNew York City is about to begin paying kids for exemplary test scores and attendance. I say it's high time! How else are kids going to get their priorities straight and instill a life-long love of learning? What good are concepts like "doing your best" or "being proud of your efforts" when everyone knows that there is no motivation like the almighty dollar?

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  • Getting Your Kid to Poop on the Potty: Do Bribes Work?

    I am bracing myself as the countdown to the official start of potty training hits five days. I'm dreading it. And as I see the other moms from our playgroup scooping up their children and running to their cars, where they have potties stored in the backseat for playground emergencies, I dread it even more. I've been reading books that outline how to potty train your child in one day and others that take a laid-back approach with strategies to stretch out over a year. I've talked to other parents about how they're doing it or what has worked best to get their kid into Thomas the Train undies (for good). And still, no matter how much I prep, I dread.

    Perhaps what has me worried are the obstacles, like forgetting to put the potty in the back of the car or the small child's inevitable stubborness about something -- flushing, pooping, pulling on the underwear, going at all. Clearly, there will be something, right? The questions have already made my week a bit anxious, filling my head with "Will I spend the rest of my life in the basement laundry room of my building washing kiddie underwear?" and "How much carpet cleaner do I need?" and "Please, God, can you make this child think it is fun to sit on the potty?" and most serious of all, "What kinds of stickers, cheapy toys, bites of candy, anything will work magic on this kid?"

    I have to say, it helps to know I'm not alone in my ramped up feelings about the transition to toilets and in wondering if bribes really work at all. I'm not sure what Dadcentric has offered up to his daughter in his (so far, unsuccessful) quest to get her to overcome her own obstacle of pooping on the potty, but he's assured us that she'll own the world once she does the deed. I just wonder if his daughter and my son are laughing evilly in the other room while we blog about our potty training frustrations, knowing full well how and when they will drop the kids off at the little plastic potty. I fear they'll pull out a crayon-scribbled list of the booty we've bribed them with, ready to collect and very satisfied at all they'll acquire just for making us wait for the big splash.


  • Bribing Children: What is it Costing Parents?

    Lollipop ClaudiaBribing kids for good behavior, I know I am guilty of this. I usually end up buying my kids each a small toy if they are good when we are waiting at the pharmacy. Ian starts yelling "LOLLIPOP!" as soon as we walk into a doctor's office. Good trips to the grocery store are often rewarded with goldfish or apples.

    I come by this honestly. My Dad was one of those parents who paid us for good report cards. I got my car when I got on the honor roll in 11th grade. I was equally punished for bad grades, I had to pay my Dad for any D's or F's that showed up, but most of the time I was working, not so much for the good grades, but for the prize. I parent this way because this is what I responded to growing up. In fact, up until my kids were born I worked in sales because I needed the incentive of commission to motivate me. It is all about what I get for what I do.

    This can be a problem. I am not at all unusual for our generation. The Gen X parents are raising our children with a sense of entitlement that rivals our own. Are out kids just growing up doing what we want for the rewards? Maybe. Is that good or bad? I don't know.


  • The Family Bed: I'm Over It - And Now, So Is She! (A Follow Up)

    Babblers, I am grateful for all of your helpful tips and advice, in response to my recent post.  Thanks to your creative ideas (bribes) and timeless wisdom (more bribes!), my 4-year-old daughter, Hazel, who had been coming into our bed at night for the last year, is now sleeping in her own bed, all night, every night. 

    Here's how we did it: I went to the dollar section at Target and loaded up on cheap "treats:" a frog wallet, chintzy Barbie clothes, sticky note pads, fancy ponytail holders, barrettes, sparkly nail polish, and Smarties - lots of Smarties.  I also got a small digital alarm clock for her to keep on the shelf above her bed.  On the first night of the bedtime regime change, Hazel and I sat down together and drew up a contract.  It read as follows:

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  • Hate Gym? Bribe Your Teacher For $1 To Sit Out

    I remember 7th grade gym class like it was yesterday.  The locker room always had a particular smell of old sweat and unwashed clothes and moldy showers, and it was where we changed out of our clothes into horrible polyester navy blue shorts and unflattering blue-and-white striped (horizontal, of course) shirts.  At least the old one-piece jumpsuits from the 60's had been consigned to use only if your own gym clothes were forgotten, something I vowed never to do, accomplished easily enough if you never took your gym clothes home at all for washing.  Then there were the girls, most of them already well-developed and flaunting it in sparkling white bras.  I was a year younger than everyone, and thin, and had to beg my mom to get me a bra to cover my flat chest just so I could maintain a modicum of modesty while changing. 

     
    Gym itself was another nightmare entirely.  Not being particularly athletic, I was relegated to the last-picked in any team event, just me and the remaining girls: the fat, the very thin, the geeky, the ones with coke-bottle glasses.  Girls with their periods could sit out for a day or two, some stretching this into practically the entire month, but the rest of us were forced daily to play dodge ball and inane relay races and throw basketballs at one another’s noses, all tortures designed to showcase the able and the athletic, the popular, and to create a living hell for everyone else.

     
    Which is why I so wish I’d had Tamara Tootle for my gym teacher.  Ms. Tootle must have been the most popular teacher at the Ernest Ward Middle School in Walnut Hill, Florida, because for a paltry $1 per student per year, she “gave students who didn't participate or dress for her gym class” a participation grade of 100%.  Is that cool or what??  No gym all year for just $1?!  So Ms. Tootle has lost her certification to teach and has to perform 300 hours community service after pleading nolo contendre to six felony counts of bribery, all in exchange for, what, maybe a few hundred dollars per year?  It hardly seems worth it, but I’ll bet those students are still smiling.



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