Sometimes when I’m writing blog posts as part of
a group, topics come up that I feel wholly inadequate to write about. This is
one of those posts! Our Everyday Scholé group is writing about how to maintain
a restful homeschool when you are dealing with negative attitudes from your
children. While I could write a post that sounds good about how to do this, it
would be a work of fiction. In all honesty, I haven’t yet figured out a good
way to keep my children’s whining, complaining, grumpiness, and hormonal mood
swings from affecting my attitude and our homeschool. So instead of telling you how to fix the
problem, I’m going to lay it all out there and talk about how it really works
around here.
When it comes to losing my mind, a few whiny,
negative comments from my kids can cause teaching from rest to fly out the
window. Usually this is for a couple of reasons: 1) We just did this exact
scenario yesterday about the exact same issue and I’m over it. Or 2) I’m trying
to give the kids plenty of free time, make things fun, spend hours researching
curriculum, and a thousand other things to keep our homeschool fun and
interesting, but I only get negative feedback. I wish I could tell you that I
handle my composure and my attitude well during these moments, but I don’t. I
do great at teaching from rest as much as it depends on me, but when I start
adding my actual students into the mix things get difficult. Apparently they
didn’t get the memo that we’re doing this homeschool gig via leisurely learning
and restful teaching now so the bad attitudes are no longer welcome.
However, despite my short-comings in this area
there are some things that are helpful to remember when trying to stay in
teaching from rest mode when bad attitudes show up.
I
can’t force them to change their attitude. This seems
to be my default method for dealing with my kids’ when they’ve gone off the
rails. If I find the right thing to take away or the right punishment, then
they will magically turn into compliant angels. It doesn’t work that way. In
fact it usually has the opposite effect. The more I try to force the more their
attitude worsens.
I
need to be a thermostat not a thermometer.
Thermometers reflect heat. In other words they don’t change the temperature,
they just show the same. Thermostats, on the other hand, actually control
temperature by not letting things get too warm. While I might not be able to
force my children to have good attitudes, I can control the situation by not
letting my attitude reflect theirs.
We
all need to take a break. When you homeschool you are
around family all day long. While this is good, in some ways it can be bad as
well. Sometimes poor attitude is the result of needing some space from each
other or getting out of the house. If our day is really going south and
everyone seems to be in a bad mood, I might try to do a fifteen minute walk around
the neighborhood with the kids or let everyone have an hour of alone time to
regroup.
Be
a detective. Bad attitudes almost always have a
root cause and it helps me to remember to search for what it is. Are they not
getting enough sleep? Are they hungry? Are they ill? Are they frustrated with
the work I’m asking them to do because it’s too easy or too difficult? If you
can cure the cause, the bad attitudes should soon go away as well.
When I’m able to remember these four things, I
am much more able to keep our homeschool time in the sweet spot of restful
teaching and learning.
For more helpful tips on how to keep restful
learning in your homeschool while dealing with attitude problems check out what
my fellow Everyday Scholé bloggers have to say:
What’s
your go to solution when attitude problems arise?
Chelli