Thursday, December 3, 2009

Parents Need to Be a Role Model for Teenagers

In order to be an effective parent we must be what we want our children
to become.


Parents should model what they teach. They should already be the kind of
people they want their children to become. The parents should put forth
a model of personal integrity and a loving marriage. The greatest gift
(besides life) that parents can give their children is a home that is
peaceful, warm, accepting, safe and secure. The first great building
block of that home is a solid, functional, loving marriage. As an
outgrowth of this marital relationship the parents model how to
communicate, how to love, how to disagree, and how to negotiate; they
model principles and virtues. They are the embodiment of what they
teach; they are kind, gentle, hardworking, patient, understanding,
tolerant, and resolute in keeping their standards. They are consistent
in their instructions, are open and interested in their children,
excited about their activities and progress, make the children feel
treasured, cherished and important, and they require responsibility,
accountability and impose or allow consequences.

All this is done in an accepting manner; never critical or judgmental,
harsh or unkind. Parents can only teach a virtue that they possess and
model. We teach what we really are and cannot teach anything else. No
parent can lead children to where they themselves have not been. Parents
cannot lift children to higher ground than they themselves are standing
upon. There are no secrets in the home and children can see through sham
and hypocrisy. They feel it, they sense it, and so it is necessary for
parents to be what they wish to teach their children.

The parent does not say, "Do what I say, not what I do." Someone has
said, "I cannot hear what you say when what you are thunders so loudly
in my ears!" Remember, whatever you are, you model, and whatever you
model, you teach. By proper modeling the parent invites in the son or
daughter to a higher moral life. There is no other way, no short cut, no
substitute for proper, good, virtuous role models. You are a model.
Whether you like it or not, you are an example and you cannot escape
that fact. The truth: we are either good examples or we are bad examples
to our children!
From the book "Let's Fix the Kids" by Dr. James Jones

In a boarding school for troubled teenagers modeling behavior must be
the same as Dr. Jones mentions. Staff personnel must live up to high
standards and set forth a positive and almost unapproachable role model.
Asking a student to do something you, yourself are unwilling to do makes
for a bad recipe. If you are considering placing your troubled teen in a
boarding school for behavior modification, make sure that the staff are
good examples of virtue and high standards.

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