Jersey Girl wrote:Okay...wow, I'm probably going to annoy you by responding to your statement with a question...but here goes.
I think Time Out is a concept that is familiar to most of us, whether we support it as a method of behavior guidance or not, I am of the "not" camp.
In 25+ years of teaching young children and about 1/3 of that teaching mixed age groups of young children, upwards of 15 or so at a time, I have never once:
Put a child in time out
Put soap on their tongue
Made them ingest hot sauce
If I can successfully do this for 25+ years (and I have) at a adult:child ratio of oh, 2:10 or 2:12 depending on the ages, why can't a parent do the same thing 1:1?
Okay... so?
I still haven't seen any stats that show whatever passes as present day child discipline creates less sociopaths than 50 years ago's.
Since I don't work in either the education system or child care, and I don't discipline my grandkids, I have no conceptualization regarding current child discipline at all. I can tell you, though, that my brother never lied about changing water more than once, my sisters never called my mother bitchy more than once, and I never broke the windshield out of our car with a metal pipe more than once. Maybe we learned the hard way, but we learned. (incidently, my brother is a preacher/truck driver, my youngest sister is a banker, and my next youngest sister keeps a small town newspaper afloat.) For my own kids, I preferred work and/or a quick slap. You screwed up bad enough in my house, and you got the toothbrush and the toilet.
(Nevo, Jan 23) And the Melchizedek Priesthood may not have been restored until the summer of 1830, several months after the organization of the Church.