Preventing or Reducing a Child's Aggressive Behavior
A child who often hits, slaps, and bites other children or
destroys their toys is not going through a stage. He is behaving
in an aggressive way that is upsetting to parents and other
children. Aggressive behavior includes:
- breaking things on purpose
- pushing, kicking, biting, or hitting other children
- name calling, swearing, or threatening playmates.
The following suggestions will help you to help your child.
- Set firm limits. Make it clear to a child that being mean is
not ok. Give clear messages such as "we don't hit people" or
"people are not for hitting." Always supervise aggressive
children when they are playing with other children so that you
can quickly step in if they start to act up. Never allow
aggressive behavior, even in play. Do not roughhouse with an
aggressive child. To do so only serves to encourage aggressive
behavior.
- Be a good role model. Always show self control. You can't
teach a child self-control when they see you lose your temper.
"Do as I say, not as I do" is a set up for failure.
- Find children an outlet. Children have a lot of physical
energy and need healthy ways to let it out. Provide children
with daily physical activities such as sports, martial arts,
or dance every day. This gives them positive ways to release
their energy. It also can help them feel good about
themselves, which can reduce angry behaviors. Teach children
to talk about their emotions. Help children express themselves
in healthy, non-hostile ways.
- Give consequences. Immediately remove a child from the
situation when he starts to act up. Use time out. Do not
spank, hit, or verbally abuse your child. These kinds of
punishment can teach a child to spank, hit, or verbally abuse
others.
- Reward positive behavior. The best way to reward a child is by
giving them positive attention. Make sure that each day you
give your child at least 30 minutes of positive attention and
at least 50 brief physical touches.
A child's aggressive behavior is much easier to prevent than it is
to eliminate. Keep your child away from people who act aggressive.
Do not let your child watch violent TV shows or movies. The less
violence your child sees, the less likely he is to be aggressive
with others.
If your child has seriously hurt another child, or continues to be
aggressive after you try these suggestions, see your healthcare
provider or a mental health professional. Aggressive behaviors may
be a sign of serious emotional or behavioral problems.
Written by E. Christophersen, PhD, author of "Little People: Guidelines for Commonsense Child Rearing.".
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2008-08-11
Last reviewed: 2008-06-30
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.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.