Incentives for Motivating Children
What are incentives?
Incentives are rewards for good behaviors. Incentives are
especially helpful for overcoming resistance when children are
locked in a power struggle or control battle with their parents.
Rewards give a child a reason to end the power struggle.
How do I use incentives?
There are four rules that make incentives powerful:
- The incentive is strongly desired by the child. You can ask
your child for ideas.
- The reward is given immediately after the child meets the
goal.
- The child is given access to the incentive for 30 to 60
minutes.
- The reward continues to be owned and controlled by the parent.
The fourth rule is essential. The child's access to the toy,
costume, or other incentive needs to be time-limited. That way
your child is really earning a privilege and not another
possession. That's the only way to maintain the incentive's value.
What are good incentives to use?
- Access to a new toy or favorite toy
- Trike or bike time
- Train set time
- Star Wars toys time
- Lego project time
- Car and truck time
- Remote control dog or car time
- Lion or dinosaur toys time
- Creating jewelry time
- Art or drawing time
- Water pistol time
- Magic sword time
- New costume or outfit time
- Batman, Superman, Snow White, Belle, etc.
- Nail Polish
- Special shoes or dress-up clothes
- Media time
- New videos
- Videotapes of favorite TV shows
- Computer or video games
- Special foods
- Candy or sweets
- Ice cream or popsicle
- Special cookies
- Favorite foods (such as pizza or strawberries)
- Food from a favorite restaurant
- Money (coins)
You can add some variety to incentives by making a grab bag of
surprises or slips of paper with different incentives written on
them. You can also reward breakthroughs or significant goals with
a triple reward (such as, going to a fast food place, picking out
a video and staying up late to watch it).
What should I NOT use as an incentive?
Physical affection (hugs and kisses) and parent-child activities
(field trips, playing games, or reading) should not be withheld
from a child or used as incentives. They are essential for your
child's emotional growth and mental health. Nurturing your child
also makes the child more receptive to parental rules and
requests. Likewise, physical activities (playing catch, going on
walks or to the park) should not be withheld from your child.
Fitness and endurance are important for your child's physical
health. However, you can offer "extra" parent-child activities as
an incentive.
Written by B. D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2004-05-10
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2008 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.