You want kids to evaluate results of their choices

thinking-teenSet aside the natural tendency to lecture or say “I told you so” when a child makes a choice and finds out afterwards it wasn’t such a great one.  Thinking about how the choices they make turn out in the end is an important part of decision-making.

Evaluating the results means that after all is said and done, kids stop and think about their choice:

  • Was it a good one?
  • Am I happy with the results?
  • Would I do the same thing again in a similar situation?

Their answers to the questions above will direct us toward our next move:

  1. Celebrate the wise choices they made OR
  2. Learn good things from the unwise ones

888971_84558883 joyCelebrate wise choices

Making wise choices is hard work, and children deserve to celebrate when they make one. They can:

  • Tell someone in the family or text their best friend.
  • Put a sign on their dog and parade him around the neighborhood.
  • Write about it in their diary or journal.
  • Hug somebody.

It’s especially important to celebrate when they chose to do something risky or new and it turned out well. Even if it was a little thing like cleaning their room without being told or not getting mad when they lost a game… don’t forget to celebrate!

kindergarten boy thinkingLearn good things from unwise choices

Sometimes children realize they made a mistake. Making mistakes does not feel very comfortable, so they want to blame someone, throw a tantrum, withdraw and feel too ashamed to talk to anyone, or try to hide it by lying about it.

It is OK to say they made an unwise choice!

We can offer them the opportunity to talk about their choice and guide them to identify a more helpful choice for future situations. We’re looking to strengthen responses like these in the child:

  • I didn’t make a very good choice that time. I’ll choose something different next time.
  • Everyone makes mistakes once in a while.
  • When you’re growing up, it takes time to learn how to make good decisions.
  • Sometimes the only way we really learn is by making a choice and then finding out it wasn’t such a great one after all.
  • I can ask for help because talking about my mistakes is the best way to learn from them.

These are grace-giving responses, and grace is a spiritual quality.

One of the greatest gifts we can give children is permission to make mistakes with the full assurance that we will not “go away” physically or emotionally. Grace is God’s way of giving us room to grow. It is the assurance that no matter what happens, all our imperfections are accepted. Grace is the antidote to shame, enabling us to see mistakes as opportunities to grow rather than opportunities for self-criticism.

The choices we make from day to day set the direction our lives will take.

The C.H.O.O.S.E. tool takes time and practice to become a skill. The steps will feel awkward and uncomfortable at first. But as you work through each step with the child, identifying options and choosing from among them becomes an automatic response to the situations they face each day.

Relax with it and have a good time together as you learn to C.H.O.O.S.E.!

(The CHOOSE tool was developed by my friend Linda Sibley, who is happy to share it.)

Tweetable:

  • A great opportunity to help kids make wise choices happens after the choice has been made. Here’s why. Click to Tweet
  • The choices we make from day to day set the direction our lives will take. A simple teaching tool here. Click to Tweet

Here’s a fun decision-making process for kids

donutsWill I get up now or hit the snooze button one more time (and probably be late for work)? Will I stop the kids from fighting now or wait until they draw blood? Will I take time to eat breakfast or eat a donut at coffee break (and feel guilty about the calories the rest of the day)? A friend just called to tell me my child beat up his child after school today. How will I deal with my child?

We all have our own way of dealing with choices.

Often our dilemma is how to make the “best” choice. How do I know something is not going to be a bad choice?

In this series we will discover a decision-making process we can use with the important children in our lives.

Through their small and weighty decisions, they will develop their own style. If the end result is their growth, we have done well.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERAExamples of growth results would be to….

  • Learn something new that increases the child’s ability to advance the common good
  • Heal relationships, bringing out greater cooperation and harmony
  • Strengthen character traits like integrity or patience

Unwise choices are often the ones we end up wishing we hadn’t made.

We can think of examples of these choices in our lives, our political, religious, business leaders’ lives and our children’s lives. We tend to make these choices….

  • for short-term pleasure
  • to look out only for our own interests
  • to relieve emotional pain or stress
  • without thought for the consequences

With so many variables in our lives, making a good choice may seem, at times, an overwhelming task.

Maybe that’s why so many people try to turn to God for guidance: “If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you.”

4 preparation questions for adults before we guide children

Before we begin guiding children, we can first take a deeper look at our own decision-making processes. Use the questions below to think through your own personal history.

  1. Which of the following best represents your decision-making style at the present time? Impulsive, logical, avoidance, emotional, imagining the worst, victim of circumstances/people, others:_______, _______.
  2. What decision can you remember making as a child that changed the course of your life?
  3. As an adult, what’s a decision you made that hurt you? Helped you? Greatly affected someone else?
  4. Describe a decision you are facing today that is of concern to you.

Stay tuned for the rest of this series as we look at how to teach children good decision-making processes, one part at a time.

(My friend Linda Sibley designed the CHOOSE tool and she is excited I’m sharing it here. This entry is part of a series.)

Tweetable:

  • Unwise choices are often the ones we end up wishing we hadn’t made. Guide kids toward better choices. Click to Tweet
  • Do you know kids who have trouble making decisions? Good, wise decisions? Break it down for them here. Click to Tweet