Featured

Bedtime: The Golden Hour of Parenting

Photographers know that the setting sun casts warm light that makes everything glow. They call this time of day, The Golden Hour. Bedtime offers similar opportunities for parents. It’s the Golden Hour when the very best of parenting is possible, from promoting creativity and empathy as you invent stories together, to internal discipline in the process of getting ready for bed, to secure attachment via a ritual that is constant and independent of any squabbles that may have preceded it. The Golden Hour of Parenting is when we help our children develop the competencies that will help them live happy, healthy lives.

The Bedtime Ritual

A healthy Bedtime Ritual includes a set time to begin getting ready for bed and a set time when lights go out and it is time to go to sleep. Between those two times, beginning and end, the child has responsibilities to carry out, depending on their developmental age. A young child may get his pajamas on and cooperate with bath and teeth brushing. An older child may need to bathe, pick up his toys, and put on his pajamas without prompting. Regardless of what the expectations are, the child understands that once those responsibilities are taken care of, the remaining time before “lights out” is available for the fun stuff, such as reading or telling stories. The sooner the responsibilities are completed, the more stories can be read. And… the child knows that the fun stuff ends at the appointed time.

The Bedtime Ritual can incorporate Core Parenting Principles

Here are some of the important parenting principles that can be emphasized at bedtime:

  • Remember the Magic Formula of Motivation
  • Replace External Control With Internal Control
  • Keep the Conflict in the Kid
  • Don’t Let the Cement Dry
  • Join Them In Their World

The Magic Formula of Motivation

The Magic Formula is simple and powerful:

Motivation = (I want) x (I can)

If children truly want something and know they are capable of accomplishing it, they are motivated.

Motivation is lacking, for instance in the case of math homework, when the formula looks like this:

Motivation =/= (teacher wants) x (I can’t)

In the case of the bedtime ritual, children are eager to have special time with mom or dad and they know they can accomplish what they need because the expectations are clear and doable.

Replace External Control with Internal Control

The promotion of self-reliance is another core goal of parenting. Young children need our protection, and caring for them is an expression of our love. But healthy development involves the shift from dependence to independence, as kids learn that mastery and self-reliance replace the need for parental controls. An authoritative parenting approach establishes clear limits, such as bedtime. It also provides children with a clear explanation for those limits and welcomes children’s questioning of those limits. When challenged, the simple answer that enables these limits to promote growth is, “Show us, through your (internal) self-regulation, that you are ready for those (external) limits to change”. Instead of battling over rules and rule breaking, parents and children should find mutual satisfaction and closeness while promoting moves toward greater self-reliance.

Keep the Conflict in the Kid

Sun Tzu in The Art of War has basic principles to follow. In the art of parenting, one important principle is Keep the Conflict in the Kid. The conflict is not in the child when getting ready for bed requires parental prompting, nagging or threatening. The structure of the Bedtime Ritual has the magic formula of motivation built in. Since the goal of bedtime stories is highly desirable and doable, the process remains within the child, who now must struggle to manage distractions and temptations as they complete their bedtime tasks. Whenever there is conflict between you and your child, you need to ask yourself, “Is the conflict in the child where it belongs?” For example, when your child argues with you about the purchase of an expensive pair of jeans, you say, “That’s what your clothing allowance is for. Use your own good judgment about the jeans.”

Don’t Let the Cement Dry

The principle of Don’t Let the Cement Dry is a simple way of reminding us that the sense our children make of their world may not be accurate, objective, or healthy. It’s always good to listen to what meaning our children make of events, especially events that were upsetting or conflictual. By asking our kids, “How was your day”, we hear how they interpreted the events of the day and have the opportunity to ask enough questions to get them to think more deeply about the event or what others involved may have been feeling. Science has taught us that we are all vulnerable to a number of cognitive biases and logical thinking is a valuable skill to promote during childhood, especially in our “alternative facts” world. Cognitive science has taught us that memories get laid down as we sleep and after the “cement” dries, assumptions become beliefs, which become biases.

Join Them in Their World

When you wish to engage your child, the default is always, join them in their world first. The ability to join your child in their world begins with an awareness of your child’s interests and pursuits. Your genuine curiosity and interest not only makes a connection with your child, it teaches your child the secret to connecting with others. Joining your child in their world also conveys interest in and validation of the child’s thoughts and feelings, which is fundamental for healthy self-esteem. This engagement teaches your child what they are entitled to in relationships vis-à-vis empathy and understanding.

So how do you join them in their world? Just listen to them. They’ll tell you what they are interested in; whether it is earthmovers, dinosaurs, space ships, or puppies. Be prepared to be a role player in your child’s make believe story, the provider of supplies for the budding artist, or the curious listener to the bad-awful-day. Your unconditional interest is a powerful basis for developing genuine self-esteem and their willingness to risk being vulnerable.

Genuine self-esteem is just one of a number of competencies that have been shown to be essential for a healthy navigation to adolescence. Read on to see how the Bedtime Ritual can promote healthy child development.

Promoting Developmental Competencies:

Stanley Greenspan, M.D., in his book, Great Kids, identified ten areas of competence that thriving kids possess. Not surprisingly, those qualities map beautifully onto the known characteristics of healthy adults. (1) Each of these competencies, listed below can be promoted during bedtime. The expectations for the child and the activities you choose as part of the Bedtime Ritual naturally evolve with the child’s developmental growth. Below are some examples of how the Bedtime Ritual can promote these developmental competencies.

Relatedness

What a great opportunity to snuggle with your child as you read stories or talk about the day. Your child comes to trust that this time is special for both of you, which you look forward to just as they look forward to it. They can trust that this special time will always be available, regardless of what “behaviors” may have occurred earlier in the day. This constancy and genuine interest is what secure attachment is all about.

Curiosity

This is a time when your child has you all to herself and experiences your genuine interest in her and her day. Her curiosity is promoted as she asks one ‘why’ question after another during your stories or talks. Instead of just giving answers, ask her to be curious about searching for answers. Kids are born curious. Don’t let her lose that constant curiosity.

Empathy

When they tell you about their day, you have a chance to ask how they felt and empathize with them. As you read stories, you can show them how you empathize with the characters. Learning to be empathic begins with experiencing the empathy of others.

Communication

Isn’t that what story time is all about? Instead of just reading to your child and letting them passively listen, you have the opportunity to ask them questions that stimulate thoughts, ideas, feelings, and opinions. Asking your child to explain and elaborate, whatever the topic, promotes their ability to communicate effectively. When they want to take control of the story, let them become the author. Whether it is listening to stories or telling stories, their verbal vocabulary grows. And as soon as they master phonics, they’ll be able to translate verbal vocabulary into reading vocabulary.

Emotional Competence

Reading stories, telling stories, and “how was your day” talks are great venues for exploring emotional awareness and expression. Asking your child how that character (in the story) must feel? Or, asking, “how did you feel when your teacher did not pick you to be the hall monitor?” Learning to self-soothe urgencies and frustrations in order to have their special time with you is a valuable developmental process.

Genuine Self-Esteem

By joining them in their world, and listening with genuine interest and curiosity, we teach our children that their thoughts and feelings are worthy of expression. By letting your child grab hold of the story you are telling and give their own twist to it, they feel entitled to assert their ideas.

Internal Discipline

Learning to get ready for bed in time for stories is all about learning internal discipline. Instead of depending on you to prompt each step of the way, they realize that the shortest route to what they want goes through “taking care of business”. When your child lobbies for a later bedtime, you simply ask them to show you they are ready by taking care of responsibilities such as waking up, getting ready for school, and being on time for the bus, all without parental help.

Logical Thinking

Your child is never too young to begin learning about their fast thinking vs. slow thinking brains. The stories you read or the interactions they recall have elements for asking about how to problem solve logically, which is the start of developing self-control for the fast thinking (impulsive) kid (in all of us). It never hurts to help your child see things from another’s perspective. In other words, we get to the bottom of misperceptions before the cement dries.

Creativity and Vision

What better time for your child to stretch their imagination in the form of story telling or developing a vision for what they aspire to as they tell you, “when I grow up I’m going to …”. There’s no reason why bedtime needs to be limited to books and stories. If your child is visual and enjoys drawing or design, have paper and markers handy. Take turns making a drawing from the random squiggles laid down by each other.

Moral Integrity

Bedtime can be a valuable time to talk about what happened that day – especially when something upsetting happened at school, or with a friend. You can help them problem solve a solution and your “why” questions help them get at solutions that are well thought out and healthy. Your child learns from your reactions to right and wrong behaviors, whether it is theirs or some character in a story. They care what you think and feel about them and their behavior. They can see when you empathize with others, especially those who have been mistreated.

Responsibility & Purpose

It is never too early to ask your child what gives them pleasure, then satisfaction, and when they are old enough, purpose. When your child expresses concern about some issue, you can help them brainstorm a plan for greater involvement. For instance, there may be many planning sessions at bedtime that precede the follow though on adopting a pet.

Examples of Bedtime Interactions:

What form might the bedtime ritual take? How might you promote one or more of these competencies? Here are some examples, fictional of course, of possible parent-child interactions during the Golden Hour. I’ve included one for each of the core principles described above, and tried to give a bit of range in children’s ages.

Ideally, the bedtime ritual begins early in childhood. But it can start at any age. Just like kids quickly learn what the rules are when they enter a new classroom with a new teacher, they can do so with the structure you create. And the more responsible they become, the more you can allow them some say in the form it takes. The first vignette is typical of what happens when the bedtime ritual is first introduced. The child forgets, tests the limits, tries to bargain, and eventually takes responsibility for making it work. This vignette captures the spirit of both the Magic Formula and Replace External Control With Internal Control.

Vignette 1 – Frustration with Limits

Child: It’s not bedtime. I’m not tired. (Child continues playing with his Legos)

Parent: I’ll be in your bedroom waiting to read to you.

Child continues to play, ignoring his bedtime routine and the time.

With ten minutes left in his bedtime he finds his dad sitting by his bed, reading the book they started the night before.

Child: That’s no fair. You are reading without me.

Parent: There’s still a little time left.

Child hurries off to the bathroom to brush his teeth and put on his pj’s. While he is there, he dawdles some more. By the time he returns to his bedroom, his father is closing the book and standing up.

Child: Where are you going? You haven’t read me stories yet.

Parent: Bedtime is over. It’s time to go to sleep.

Child: But that’s not fair. You read our book without me.

Parent: Get ready in time tomorrow so we can read as much as possible.

Child: Just read to me for five minutes. Please. I can’t go to sleep if you don’t read to me.

Parent: You are a very good arguer. I like reading to you, so get ready early tomorrow so we can get all caught up.

Child: I’m not going to sleep if you don’t read to me.

Parent: I know you are upset. So figure out how to get ready faster next time so you have extra time.

Child: It’s not fair.

Parent: Give me a hug, goodnight.

The following evening, the child is ready for bed well ahead of schedule.

Child: Come on Dad. We have stories to read.

Parent: Are you all ready?

Child: Yep. See. PJ’s. Teeth. And all my toys are put away.

Parent: Great. I was hoping we’d have extra time for reading.

Vignette 2 – Don’t Let the Cement Dry Overnight

In this vignette, the parent knows to be curious about the child’s day. Fortunately, this girl was asked to think more carefully about what happened at school and the sense she made of it, instead of going to bed mad at her friend and going to school prepared to treat her friend based on an assumption that was false. Isn’t that how wars start?

Parent: Mom told me something happened at school today.

Child: “I hate Dana”

P: “I thought Dana was your best friend.”

C: “Was (my best friend).”

P: “What happened?”

C: “Dana picked Sam instead of me today. Dana always picks me first.”

P: “I’ll bet that hurt your feelings.”

C: “Yeah. We always play on the same team.”

P: “Did you ask Dana why?”

C: “Seriously?”

P: “What did you do?”

C: “I tripped Dana on the way into class (after recess).”

P: “How’d that feel?”

C: “Good. Because I was mad.”

P: “You and Dana are always together. What made today different?”

C: “Maybe Dana decided to make Sam her best friend.”

P: “Here’s my phone. Call Dana right now and ask her why she picked Sam instead of you.”

C: “You can’t be serious.”

P: “Do you want to go to sleep thinking your best friend doesn’t like you anymore?”

Bzzzzz (child calling)

C: “Dana. It’s me. Why did you pick Sam instead of me?”

(long pause)

“Oh …. Oh ….”

(long pause)

“I’m sorry I tripped you.”

(child hangs up)

P: “What did Dana say?”

C: “She said Sam was sad because her grandma died and she needed to be cheered up.”

Fortunately, our parent inspected the job site before the cement dried.

Vignette 4Your Turn

Here is an example of a tradition many kids enjoy: the spontaneous making up of bedtime stories. In this vignette, at the child’s request, they are making up a story together. This is a variation on the theme of joining them in their world. As you read, notice how the child is working through her own issues about relating to others. In the story that they create, low and behold, joining others in their world turns out to be a great way to connect with others, whereas demanding that they join you in yours is a total nonstarter.

Parent: What would you like to do tonight?

Child: Let’s make up a story.

P: Who is going to start?

C: I am!

Parent: Good. I like it when you start stories.

C: Once upon a time, there was a very selfish little girl, who wanted everything her way. One day, she went to a friend’s house to play, but the girl was already playing with someone else. Your turn.

P: What an interesting start. When she saw the girl playing with someone else, she got angry and told the girl she needed to play with her. But the two girls just laughed at her and told her to go away. Your turn.

C: She was sad. So she went home and played with her dog. But her dog didn’t want to play fetch. He rolled on his back to get his tummy scratched. When the little girl kept trying to play fetch, her dog walked away. Your turn.

P: “Why the glum face”, her mother asked, when she came in the kitchen?

“No one will play with me. Not even Boomer.”

“Oh, that’s too bad.” Your turn.

C: So the girl asked her mother to play with her. But her mother said she was busy making cookies. “See, nobody wants to play with me,” the girl said to her mom. Her mom said, “You are good at making cookies. Why don’t you help me?” Your turn.

P: The girl said she didn’t want to make cookies. She wanted to make a cake. Her mom said that she could make a cake by herself or she could make cookies with her. Her choice. Your turn.

C: The girl was mad and walked out of the kitchen. But she got bored and came back to see if her mom would still let her make cookies. Her mom said, “sure”.

Children’s Book Suggestion for Bedtime

Finally, if you want a book that beautifully speaks to the Bedtime Ritual, take a look at A Story for Small Bear by Alice B. McGinty (2020, Schwartz and Wade Books, illustrated by Richard Jones). Good writers follow the adage, “show me, don’t tell me”. When it comes to getting ready for bed, this book does just that. Small Bear can’t dilly or dally, because she has to get ready to hibernate for the winter. It is a delightful story for kids and a beautiful metaphor for bedtime that parents will put to good use when talking about “dallying and dallying” at bedtime.

This post is an example of what you can find in the Parent Toolkit – Practical Ideas section, accessible from the main menu on the home page of the website.

Not Reading? – Won’t or Can’t?

Parent: I followed your “join him in his world” advice with my son.

Dr. B: Oh good. How did it go?

Parent: Not so good.

Dr. B: Well.

Parent: Well, what?

Dr. B: What part didn’t work?

Parent: He liked the idea of making up stories about stuff he was interested in.

Dr. B: Good.

Parent: And we both liked your idea of me writing down those stories as he dictated them.

Dr. B: Good.

Parent: And he liked the idea of doing art work to go with the stories.

Dr. B: Good.

Parent: But …

Dr. B: But what? Sounds like it went well

Parent: No. Not so good. When it came time to read his book, he really struggled.

Dr. B: Even though he was reading his own story?

Parent: Yep. It’s like, he couldn’t read some of the bigger words.

Dr. B: Hmmm.

Parent: When he got stuck, he started telling the story from memory, instead of reading the actual words.

Dr. B: Did you point to individual words and ask him to read them?

Parent: Yeah, but then he got frustrated and didn’t want anything to do with the book.

Dr. B: Do a little experiment with him. Next time, ask him to sound out the word he is struggling with.

Parent: I already did that.

Dr. B: And?

Parent: He couldn’t do it. He could sound out some of the letters for simple words, but he couldn’t even do the word House.

Dr. B: Hmmm.

Parent: Yeah. Hmmm. You know what was really interesting? He read the word Earthmover in his book, but …

Dr. B: But couldn’t read it when he saw it somewhere else.

Parent: How did you guess?

Dr. B: Well, given what you’ve told me, the word Earthmover was probably on every page of his book and he probably had plenty of pictures of earthmovers, right?

Parent: Yep.

Dr. B: I’ll bet he remembered the word, just like he remembered the story and the pictures on the page, but he wasn’t really reading the word, in the sound-it-out-sense.

Parent: What does that mean?

Dr. B: Well, you might ask his teacher if he has been taught phonics.

Parent: Why ask that?

Dr. B: Phonics is the part of learning to read that is sometimes skipped. It’s teaching kids the sounds that go with letters or combinations of letters.

Parent: So they can sound out new words.

Dr. B: Exactly.

Parent: I don’t remember any of my kids learning phonics. I certainly didn’t.

Dr. B: Did you have trouble learning to read?

Parent: I was just like my son. I hated reading as a kid.

Dr. B: We all learn to talk naturally. But putting words we know into written form is like putting it in a code.

Parent: So, phonics is teaching kids how to break the code.

Dr. B: Exactly.

Parent: How come my other kids are such good readers? Without phonics?

Dr. B: Some kids just seem to break the code on their own.

Parent: Probably because they had so much story time.

Dr. B: Well, they probably learned to recognize a lot of words by sight.

Parent: And then taught themselves a workable code?

Dr. B: I don’t know. It sure seems like it. But the rest of us, who struggled to learn to read, certainly needed the decoder ring.

Parent: You mean Phonics?

Dr. B: Yep. Phonics.

Parent: I think I still have my decoder ring, somewhere.

fon/ix iz phun

Doc: Why the glum face?

Parent: My kid hates reading.

Doc: Oh, oh. Are you sure he’s really your kid?

Parent: I guess reading interest and ability aren’t inherited.

Doc: If ever there was a family where that would be the case, it would be yours … but no. there’s no such gene.

Parent:  So why doesn’t he like to read? We’ve read to him since his inception.

Doc: Ha. Bet you read him Moby Dick while he was floating in amniotic fluid.

Parent: By this age, his brother and sister were reading bedtime stories to us.

Doc: Maybe reading is hard for him.

Parent: The other kids just started reading along with us during story time.

Doc: Were they decoding new words or remembering familiar ones?

Parent: What do you mean, decoding?

Doc: Decoding means sounding out words. It’s knowing what sound each letter can make and then combining them.

Parent: You mean like c – a – t?

Doc: Exactly.

Parent: I don’t remember the older kids doing that. They seemed to recognize familiar words.

Doc: Some kids can do that, but the best way to learn to read is to combine decoding with a good spoken vocabulary.

Parent: Spoken vocabulary? As in knowing what peanut butter means before being able to read it?

Doc: Yep. When we teach kids to decode new words by sounding them out, they are able to match those written words with words they already know (verbally).

Parent: So, the teaching of reading is like teaching code breaking.

Doc: Exactly. And the code is called “phonics”.

Parent: So, if my son knows all the phonics sounds, he’ll be able to read good?

Doc: Well.

Parent: Well, what?

Doc: Kids who don’t get explicit instruction in all the phonics sounds, with practice in dividing words into syllables, can really struggle with reading.   

Parent: How do I find out whether he’s learned that?

Doc: Give him some unfamiliar words and see if he attacks them by sounding them out, like va/ca/tion. He needs to learn that the letter “a” can be long or short, as in base and bat. There’s a set of decoding rules in addition to the basic sounds, like the “e” on the end of “base” making a long “a” sound. He also needs to learn that “tion” sounds like “shun”.

Parent: Sounds like there are a lot of sounds and a lot of rules.

Doc: As you know, English has lots of exceptions, but there are 44 basic sounds for the consonants and vowels and when he knows them, he’s on his way. The exceptions won’t slow him down that much.

Parent: So, what do I do? Go talk to his teacher about the need for Phonics?

Doc: I think if you want the best results in the shortest amount of time, you should do it yourself.

Parent: Do what?

Doc: Teach him phonics.

Parent: How would I learn to do that?

Doc: How do you learn to fix your dishwasher or replace a headlight?

Parent: I search for a video on You Tube.

Doc: That’s where I would start for phonics instruction.

Parent: How did anything get done before You Tube?

Doc: It was a struggle.

Parent: Is that where you learned to be a psychologist?

Doc: We’ll just let that be our little secret.

Fon-ix iz fun tu

Parent: I’ve been thinking about your phonics gig. The ability to read is really important.

Dr. B: Oh, my goodness. Don’t get me started.

Parent: By all means. Give me your elevator pitch for reading.

Dr. B: Elevator pitch? Without the ability to read, it’s hard to get out of society’s basement.

Parent: You mean all good paying jobs require reading?

Dr. B: Absolutely. And the ability to read also affects how much we understand things like health risks, nutrition, medical advice, employment rights, the legal system, …

Parent: I get it. Reading opens all doors.

Dr. B: More like, the lack of reading ability closes most doors.

Parent: Lots of kids hate school.

Dr. B: Lots of kids really struggle with reading. That makes school worth hating.

Parent: Ouch.

Dr. B: For children, poor reading is associated with increased risk of school dropout, attempted suicide, incarceration, anxiety, depression, and low self-concept.

Parent: Reading is so central, isn’t it?

Dr. B: Did you know that nationwide, only 30% of 3rd graders read at or above grade level?

Parent: That’s shameful.

Dr. B: The odds of dropping out of school are four times higher for those poor readers.

Parent: And.

Dr. B: And half or all inmates in prison are functionally illiterate and 80% didn’t finish high school.

Parent: Now I’m getting depressed.

Dr. B: It IS depressing. We can go to Mars, but we can’t teach our kids to read?

Parent: Actually, I’m more angry than depressed.

Dr. B: As you should be.

Parent: You said some schools aren’t teaching reading the right way? How can that be? Hasn’t reading been studied?

Dr. B: It has. There is a science of reading. But not everyone studies it, believes it, or knows how to teach it.

Parent: That does sound familiar. Some people have alternative facts about how to teach reading?

Dr. B: Something like that.

Parent: So, if you are a parent, you could feel like your child is getting cheated.

Dr. B: Yeah. Especially if you don’t have the money to go elsewhere.

Parent: Can’t they sue their school system?

Dr. B: Some people have. There are states that have passed laws that phonics must be taught in grade schools.

Parent: Good, but I’ll bet that’s not easy to enforce.

Dr. B: You are sounding jaded.

Parent: It’s been a jaded decade. What’s a parent to do?

Dr. B: Squeak early, squeak often.

Parent: I like that.

Dr. B: If their state has passed legislation mandating phonics instruction, they can make sure that it is actually taught, not just given lip service.

Parent: Taught, as in teachers getting specific training in teaching phonics, having the classroom materials, and receiving the 1:1 tutoring help to individualize it?

Dr. B: Hey. You’re quick to grasp the essentials.

Parent: I get the sense that phonics isn’t exactly rocket science. Phonics may be simple and boring, but it is fundamental. Kind of like needing to know how to multiply and divide.

Dr. B: Good analogy. You seem to be a math guy. Here’s a simple formula for reading.

RC = D x LC

Where (RC) is reading comprehension, (D) is decoding, and (LC) is language comprehension. 

Parent: So, it’s great that we read to kids. That’s the LC part. But if we skip the phonics part, the D for decoding part, we are basically multiplying by zero!

Dr. B: Exactly!

Parent: Are parents dependent on schools to get it right with reading?

Dr. B: The quality of teaching makes a huge difference in student outcomes. Like earning $320,000 more over a lifetime.

Parent: Wow. So, a low performing school is costing the community almost $8 million dollars for every class of 25 kids.

Dr. B: And that doesn’t even add in all the extra expenses to the community of social, legal and medical services that accompany the poorly educated.

Parent: So, if a parent is stuck in a neighborhood with poor schools and no choice, what can they do? And don’t tell me squeak.

Dr. B: Learn how to teach their kids to read.

Parent: How?

Dr. B: Same way you fix your car. Start watching YouTube videos about how to teach phonics. There’s lots of material on line, especially given how many kids are home schooled.

Parent: Can I ask ChatGPT how to teach phonics?

Dr. B: Sure, but you probably get what you pay for.

Parent: So, if I’m willing to pay?

Dr. B: Search for How to teach phonics or Parents teaching phonics or Learning Phonics at Home. Or just push the easy button and look up Hooked on Phonics.

Fon-ix Iz Fun

Parent: What does your T-shirt say? F-o-n … i-x?

Dr. B: Oh, this? It’s my new gig?

Parent: Is Fon … ix some new high-tech venture?

Dr. B: Actually, it’s about as low tech as it gets.

Parent: Huh?

Dr. B: I’m teaching phonics to kindergarten and first grade kids at the neighborhood school.

Parent: Oh, I get it. Fon-ix stands for p-h-o-n-i-c-s.

Dr. B: Yep.

Parent: So, you are teaching them phonics and THEN you are going to teach them how to spell?

Dr. B: If you take the T-shirt literally, …

Parent: … rather than seriously? Why are you tutoring kids in phonics?

Dr. B: If you were like me, learning to read as a kid was hard?

Parent: How did you know?

Dr. B: Well, I probably had better than a 50:50 chance of getting it right.

Parent: Did you slink down in your seat, so you wouldn’t get called on to read?

Dr. B: No, I usually asked to go to the bathroom, or to the nurse.

Parent: Did the teacher know you were faking it?

Dr. B: I wasn’t faking. Reading Class made me ill.

Parent: I can believe it. My mother and I had some epic battles over reading. She thought I was just being lazy.

Dr. B: That’s too bad, because it wasn’t your fault. We were just being taught the wrong way.

Parent: So, you are going to call my mother and tell her that?

Dr. B: I thought your mother passed away.

Parent: Yes, she did. That’s my point. Isn’t it a little late to be telling me this?

Dr. B: What if I told you, many schools are still teaching kids the wrong way?

Parent: If I was a parent of one of those kids, I’d be pissed. So, phonics is part of the right way?

Dr. B: Yep.

Parent: Phonics, as I understand it, is learning the sounds of all the letters. Isn’t that pretty boring? For the kid and the teacher?

Dr. B: Yeah. Actually, it is kind of boring. Kind of like doing push-ups is boring.

Parent: So, now you are going to tell me why it’s good for us … like push-ups?

Dr. B: Kids are hard wired for learning to talk. If they can hear, they’ll learn to talk. And the more they are talked to or read to, the more words they understand. 

Parent: Here comes the “But”. I can just sense it.

Dr. B: But kids aren’t hard wired to read. Just because they know a word, doesn’t mean they can read it.

Parent: Ah, I’m seeing what you are getting at. Written words are like a code and kids need to learn how to break the code.

Dr. B: Exactly. There are 26 letters in the alphabet, but there are 44 different sounds. And what sounds letters represent have all sorts of rules.

Parent: Now you really are boring me.

Dr. B: When kids see a new word, they need to know how to sound it out. And once they do, if it’s a word they already know …

Parent: Walla! They’re in business.

Dr. B: But if they don’t know how to sound out words, it’s like …

Parent: – being in a boat without a paddle.

Dr. B: I was going to say it’s like trying to teach yourself how to swim; but I like the ‘no paddle’ metaphor.

Bedtime Phonics?

Parent: I think what you are saying is, don’t depend on school to teach phonics?

Dr. B: Squeak globally, act locally.

Parent: Huh?

Dr. B: Advocate for the teaching of phonics in your school system, but teach it to your kids at home, before they even get to school.

Parent: Easier said than done.

Dr. B: Why do you say that?

Parent: When am I supposed to squeeze phonics instruction into our busy days?

Dr. B: It doesn’t have to be long and complicated. Besides, too much phonics at one time can be pretty boring.

Parent: So lump all the little should’s together, and get them over with? Take your vitamins, brush your teeth and study your phonics?

Dr. B: That doesn’t sound very appealing.

Parent: Nope!

Dr. B: So how do you get your kids to take their vitamins and brush their teeth?

Parent: The vitamins taste like Sweet Tarts, so it’s more a matter of limiting them to one-a-day.

Dr. B: And the teeth?

Parent: That’s just one of the bedtime tasks necessary before story time starts.

Dr. B: I’m glad that Bedtime Ritual is working for you.

Parent: Oh, my yes. It works great. Now, are you going to add phonics to the bedtime “to-do’s”?

Dr. B: That would probably work, but then it takes on the same appeal as teeth brushing and face washing.

Parent: Necessary drudgery?

Dr. B: Something like that. Are you pretty good at holding to the limits of when story time ends?

Parent: Yep. It was briefly a source of conflict, but they’ve adjusted.

Dr. B: Good.

Parent: Max just gets started early and has extra time for stories and Zoey has a flashlight in her bed she uses to prolong stories for herself.

Dr. B: So, Max will have a Roth IRA before he’s twelve.

Parent: And Zoey will be trying to get him to invest in her latest venture.

Dr. B: What if you tacked on an extra five minutes of phonics at the end of story time?

Parent: As in stretching the limits?

Dr. B: As in linking extra time with Mom or Dad with phonics practice.

Parent: Doesn’t that open the flood gates to other requests for extra time?

Dr. B: You don’t think you can handle those requests for exceptions?

Parent: Actually, I don’t mind them. I’m willing to listen to a well-crafted argument.

Dr. B: Good. Let me know how it turns out.

Later

Dr. B: So, did you try the Phonics at Bedtime?

Parent: Yeah. Actually, it’s been working pretty well.

Dr. B: How did you present it?

Parent: I said, “Do you want to do ten minutes of word games before lights out?”

Dr. B: And you explained that it was extra time?

Parent: Yeah. Zoey asked if we had to tell Mom.

Dr. B: Ha. She thought she was getting away with something?

Parent: Yeah. Max wasn’t so sure he wanted to do it. He thought it was kind of like breaking the house rules.

Dr. B: How did you handle that?

Parent: I told him it was up to him. He could have lights out at the regular time, or he could do the extra word games. His choice.

Dr. B: What did he think?

Parent: He wasn’t quite sure he wanted to do some silly games.

Dr. B: What did you do?

Parent: I basically shifted gears and explained to him the idea that phonics was like the key for breaking the code of how to read.

Dr. B: So, you told him what the payoff was for the time spent?

Parent: Yeah, that’s kind of how Max works. He wants to know the “why”, the “what”, and the “how”.

Later

Dr. B: How’s the Bedtime Phonics plan working?

Parent: It’s been easier than I would have guessed.

Dr. B: Good. So, tell me what you’ve been doing. Have you been using a program like Hooked on Phonics?

Parent: I tried to use the Hooked on Phonics activities, but each kid had other ideas.

Dr. B: Is that good or bad?

Parent: Just the way my kids operate.

Dr. B: Now I’m really curious.

Parent: Well, as you might have guessed, once Max recognized that phonics provided him with the secret decoder ring, he wanted nothing to do with the fun and games activities. He just wanted the basic nuts ‘n’ bolts of letters, sounds and rules.

Dr. B: Ha, that kid will do well in life.

Parent: As long as you have enough red meat to feed him.

Dr. B: So he’s making fast progress?

Parent: Yeah, he wants to incorporate decoding into story time.

Dr. B: Are you keeping up?

Parent: I’m having to read ahead in the How to Teach Phonics materials, so I can be ready to explain a new rule or exception.

Dr. B: The English language has lots of those exceptions.

Parent: Yeah, and Max is not crazy about them. He says they should have done a better job of inventing English.

Dr. B: Ha. I like that. Well, he’ll love Spanish, then. And Zoey. Can’t wait to hear what she’s done with the curriculum.

Parent: Yeah. As you might have guessed, we got off the main roads right away.

Dr. B: Give me an example.

Parent: Well, as soon as she learns the sounds letters make, she sets about inventing her own words.

Dr. B: With her own meanings?

Parent: Of course.

Dr. B: Are the words phonetically, correct?

Parent: Yep. However, she is the only one who remembers what the words mean.

Dr. B: Ha. She turned the world upside down. Good for her.

Parent: Guess this is how it feels to be a new reader?

Dr. B: Yeah. Especially one who has not acquired a large verbal vocabulary to map onto the newly decoded words.

Parent: The teaching manual encouraged sounding out nonsense spellings. But …

Dr. B: Only Zoey would think to define the words.

Parent: Yep. The world according to Zoey. That attitude can get old sometimes.

Dr. B: Her personality will serve her well in the long run.

Parent: Did I tell you she flunked her Montessori School Entrance Exam?”

Dr. B: She did what?

Parent: Yeah. We went for a visit and Zoey was doing her own thing. The teacher asked, “Is she always like this?”

Dr. B: And you knew it wasn’t a good fit?

Parent: Yep. School has to fit the kid, not the other way around.

Dr. B: Absolutely.

Humiliation Treatment Plan? – IV

Dr. B – What have you concluded about coasting and humiliation?

Parent A – Oh, I think they are linked. Coasting is a safe form of avoiding humiliation.

Dr. B – Just do enough to avoid criticism?

Parent A – Yeah.

Dr. B – Have you developed a coasting cure?

Parent A – As a matter of fact. I do have some ideas. Or I should say, “We have some ideas”.

Dr. B – Your son is helping develop a coasting cure?

Parent A – With his help, I realized it is not just his issue.

Dr. B – Ha. A family affliction?

Parent A – Yeah. Coasting, as in the effort you seem to be giving this session.

Dr. B – I’m just trying to empower you.

Parent A – Whatever. He and I agreed that coasting did several things: It had to be easy. Just do as little as possible at the last minute. If you weren’t trying your hardest, you had nothing to lose. Do just enough to keep everyone satisfied (or not criticizing you).

Dr. B – And believe that school is not important?

Parent A – Yeah. Peer support for that notion is important, but we didn’t address that in our analysis.

Dr. B – So, what is the recipe?

Parent A – No grades; no comparisons; no time limits; and no failures. Just learning.

Dr. B – No failures? We want our kids to learn to tolerate failures and learn from them.

Parent A – That reminds me. One more on the list: “There’s no one right way to do something.”

Dr. B – How can you have no failures?

Parent A – It’s all about rebranding, Doc. Failures are attempts or trials or experiments. You know. Edison made a thousand different attempts with different filaments, not a thousand failures.

Dr. B – Ok. So, safety from failure, comparison, and judgment?

Parent A – Yeah. A humiliation free zone.

Dr. B – Sounds like a good plan. How are you going to apply that to school?

Parent A – I suspect there is more potential for this at school than my son realizes.

Dr. B – You mean with the math and English teachers?

Parent A – I think their options for rewriting and retesting had some of these factors in mind.

Dr. B – So, this plan will get a fair hearing?

Parent A – I suspect it will.

Dr. B – And here I thought the formula was, “Less work, more play”. 

Parent A – How did you ever get to be a doctor?

Dr. B – Can’t coast when you are married with kids.

Humiliation Hypothesis – III

Dr. B – What have you concluded about video gaming and coasting?

Parent A – My new hypothesis is that it doesn’t cause a lack of motivation, but enables it.

Dr. B – What do you mean by that?

Parent A – We did that experiment of no screens for a week.

Dr. B – I remember.

Parent A – Removing video gaming did not lead to improved effort in school.

Dr. B – Just improved effort with long lost hobbies as I recall.

Parent A – Yeah. It freed up time for other interests that had been neglected.

Dr. B – Like his robot building as I recall. Is he still doing that?

Parent A – Yeah. In fact, I think the robotics cut into video gaming more than anything else.

Dr. B – What’s your conclusion?

Parent A – I don’t think limiting video games and robotics would have any effect on school work.

Dr. B – So, let him play as much video gaming as he wants?

Parent A – Are you kidding? Of course not.

Dr. B – I thought you said video gaming was not the cause of poor effort in school?

Parent A – It’s still a choice of how to spend time. And if he is gaming he is not doing something else.

Dr. B – Like building robots.

Parent A – Or interacting with the family or reading a book or hanging out with friends or helping make dinner or …

Dr. B – I get it. It’s a time eater. The question should be, “What else would he be doing if he weren’t playing video games?”

Humiliation Hypothesis – II

Dr. B – What became of your humiliation hypothesis? Did you and your son discuss it?

Parent A – Yes.  The first attempt didn’t go well. He denied that he avoided humiliation.

Dr. B – You mean “being made to feel bad”?

Parent A – I started with that and he said, “Dad, why are you avoiding the word humiliation?”

Dr. B – Was he willing to talk about it?

Parent A – Surprisingly, he quit being defensive, and we had a pretty good discussion.

Dr. B – What did you two figure out?

Parent A – Actually, we had better luck talking about the positives – what worked well with soccer and video games.

Dr. B – Wise move.

Parent A – Eventually, that led to a conclusion that freedom from judgment and comparisons made gaming so much better than school.

Dr. B – I thought gaming was all about competition – winning and losing – and therefore comparisons. 

Parent A – I said the very same thing to him. He said, with gaming, everyone loses while they are getting better. No one cares. They just play the game over.

Dr. B – And what about the charismatic coach factor we discussed?

Parent A – He perked up when I said, “You just need to find a teacher like coach Barnes”.

Dr. B – And that led you to what?

Parent A – I suggested we go talk to his math and English teachers.

Dr. B – About what?

Parent A – About what he liked and didn’t like about their classes.

Dr. B – How did that go?

Parent A – They were good sports about it.

Dr. B – Did you bring up the subject of effort?

Parent A – First, I asked how they thought he was doing.

Dr. B – Did their assessment match his “I’m doing just fine”?

Parent A – “Just fine” was the operative phrase. I think it meant something different to them than to my son.

Dr. B – And you asked what “just fine” meant?

Parent A – Absolutely. I wasn’t going to let an opportunity like that pass.

Dr. B – And what did you all conclude?

Parent A – Both teachers said he was doing fine, but wasn’t giving his full or best effort.

Dr. B – And your son’s response?

Parent A – He slunk down in his chair as if we wouldn’t notice he was still there.

Dr. B – Ha. Yeah. Did you reach any new understandings?

Parent A – Well I did. I was unaware that the opportunity for avoiding humiliation was available, if he chose to use it.

Dr. B – What do you mean?

Parent A – The math teacher said that he was welcome to come see him after an exam, they could go over what he missed, and after focusing on those areas of improvement, he was free to retake a test for a better grade.

Dr. B – Do you think your son will do it?

Parent A – I’m hopeful. I certainly feel like I can ask about it if the coasting continues.

Dr. B – And the English teacher?

Parent A – Get this. This guy had a sure-fire system for success and my son acted like he had never heard of it.

Dr. B – I can tell you are excited.

Parent A – Actually I am. I wish I had something like it in school. This teacher has a whole rubric for what characteristics an essay contains to warrant an A, B, C, D, or F.

Dr. B – You mean like a paint by number essay writing rubric?

Parent A – And get this. He lets the kids have as many rewrites as they care to do.

Dr. B – This teacher needs to get a life.

Parent A – I asked some other parents. They all want their kids in his class. They say their kids go in kicking and screaming because he’s the toughest grader in the school but come out saying he was the best teacher they ever had.

Dr. B – That’s high praise. How did your son respond?

Parent A – The teacher pulled out is last essay. There were more teacher comments than original text.

Dr. B – This guy needs a raise.

Parent A – No kidding. When I read the comments, they clearly explained the problems, linked them to the rubric, and did everything but put the ball on the tee for his next shot (at it).

Dr. B – What effect did this have on your son?

Parent A – I don’t know, yet. But I’m certainly more aware of what opportunities he has and is not taking advantage of.

Dr. B – Do you think either of these teachers could play more of a role of charismatic adult for him?

Parent A – That’s a good question. I let both of them know that they could expect much more out of him.

Dr. B – Ha. What did your son think of that?

Parent A – I’m not sure. I think part of him was annoyed that I had meddled, but another part of him appreciated the fact that we all knew he had more ability that he wasn’t showing.

Dr. B – So, what is your final conclusion about video gaming. Does it interfere with school?

Parent A – I suspect it makes coasting easier. 

Dr. B – As in, “out of sight, out of mind”?

Parent A – Maybe doesn’t cause it, but certainly enables it. But so does YouTube, texting, building robots, or playing the guitar.

Dr. B – In other words, “all things more fun than doing homework”

Parent A – Yep.

Just coasting – The humiliation hypothesis

Dr. B – What have you figured out about your son’s coasting in school?

Parent A – Well, I have some guesses, but no answers.

Dr. B – What are your guesses?

Parent A – We did the week-long experiment of no screens. That seemed to show me that video games were not the CAUSE of him not applying himself in school.

Dr. B – So, video games don’t cause coasting?

Parent A – Maybe enables it, but doesn’t cause it. At least not with my son.

Dr. B – That’s an important finding, but …

Parent A – (overlapping) It hasn’t made a difference in his effort in school.

Dr. B – So, where does he give his best effort?

Parent A – Video games.

Dr. B – Ha. Yeah.

Parent A – And on the soccer field.

Dr. B – That’s interesting. So, his coasting is only in certain areas, like school. What is your best guess at why he coasts in school?

Parent A – He says he is doing well enough, but he would never say that about video gaming or soccer. He’s always striving to improve with those.

Dr. B – What do you think is going on?

Parent A – He says he just doesn’t care about school. But he used to love school. So, not caring sounds like an excuse.

Dr. B – What is his excuse protecting him from?

Parent A – Well, my guess is he doesn’t want to give his full effort and still come up short.

Dr. B – Is that what he has told you?

Parent A – Actually, that is a guess based on my attitude at that age. Avoid comparisons that can make you look bad.

Dr. B – Avoiding humiliation ranks right up there for middle school aged boys.

Parent A – Not sure avoiding humiliation has an age limit on it.

Dr. B – You are probably right. I’ve seen plenty of middle-aged-middle schoolers still guarding against humiliation.

Parent A – What do you suggest I do with this great hypothesis?

Dr. B – What hypothesis is this?

Parent A – That my son’s effort is inversely related to the threat of humiliation.

Dr. B – That does sound elegant.

Parent A – Thank you, but how do I translate it into greater effort in school? And don’t just give me that tired old motivation formula of yours.

Motivation = (I want) x (I can)

Dr. B – According to your hypothesis, the risk of humiliation discourages motivation or effort. How is this for a formula?

Motivation/Humiliation = Effort

Parent A – Great, but where do we intervene?

Dr. B – Good question. I guess you could increase the wanting or the belief that he can.

Parent A – Or decrease the threat of humiliation.

Dr. B – That would be ideal. How do those factors work with video games and soccer?

Parent A – I think with video games, he really enjoys mastering the levels and getting better. And he can try, fail, learn, and play again, all in the privacy of his room. He’s taken the threat of humiliation out of the picture – at least when it comes to public humiliation.

Dr. B – That sounds good. How about the soccer?

Parent A – He enjoys being part of the team. Loves the game.

Dr. B – And the humiliation of losing?

Parent A – He’s got a great coach who inspires him.

Dr. B – Inspires in what way?

Parent A – He has high expectations for my son. He turns mistakes into learning opportunities. And my son adores him and doesn’t want to disappoint him.

Dr. B – So, effort is valued over goals?

Parent A – Effort to improve is the primary goal.

Dr. B – I need to meet this guy.

Parent A – So, how does this help with school?

Dr. B – I like your analysis of soccer and video games. But you need to see what your son thinks of it.

Parent A – And if by some chance he does?

Dr. B – Then you and your son go to school and find a charismatic teacher or a class where the threat of humiliation is manageable. Or both.

Parent A – Well, that should be easy.

Dr. B – Oh, and you might want to find a better word to use than humiliation.

Parent A – Now you tell me.

Just Coasting Part VII – Drop the agenda

Parent A – I think the benefits of the grand experiment (of no screens for a week) are wearing off.

Dr. B – What do you mean?

Parent A – Well, like you warned me, limiting the video gaming did not produce an academic transformation.

Dr. B – So you deem your little experiment a failure?

Parent A – Oh, no. In fact, I’m doing some writing in the morning now and I’m back to reading novels. 

Dr. B – And neglecting your morning coffee and “all the news that’s fit to print”?

Parent A – The world seems to be managing without my full attention.

Dr. B – And how about your son?

Parent A – What do you mean?

Dr. B – I remember you saying he was making some “amazing’ projects out of Lego’s.

Parent A – Actually, he’s kept at it.

Dr. B – Your experiment had no effect on his school work, but …

Parent A – But I missed an opportunity to show him that his video gaming interfered with pursuit of genuine interests – like his Lego inventions?

Dr. B – That sounds like a variation on your “misplaced priorities agenda”.

Parent A – Well it’s true.

Dr. B – Of course it is, but it goes without saying. Your son has decided for himself to spend more time on Lego inventions and less on video gaming.

Parent A – So, keep the conflict in the kid, stupid? Is that what you are saying?

Dr. B – I would have gone with “Less is More”, but now that you have said it, sure … don’t mess with a good within-kid-process underway.

Parent A – Duly noted. Now what?

Dr. B – You mean “what?” with respect to your school effort agenda, or “what?” with respect to talking to your son from a place of genuine curiosity?

Parent A – Ouch. You are being rough on me today.

Dr. B – I’m sorry if it feels like a dope slap. I’m just pointing out a missed opportunity to be curious about an area of obvious interest and ability. And shouldn’t that be your “agenda”?

Parent A – I guess I did have blinders on.

Dr. B – Don’t worry. If you only get a hit one third of the time, you’ll end up in the Hall of Fame.

Parent A – And not the Parental Hall of Shame?

Dr. B – Goodness no. Remember, we’re aiming for “Good Enough”, not perfection.