Raising a Moral Child

APRIL 11, 2014

What does it take to be a good parent? We know some of the tricks for teaching kids to become high achievers. For example, research suggests that when parents praise effort rather than ability, children develop a stronger work ethic and become more motivated.

Yet although some parents live vicariously through their children’s accomplishments, success is not the No. 1 priority for most parents. We’re much more concerned about our children becoming kind, compassionate and helpful. Surveys reveal that in the United States, parents from European, Asian, Hispanic and African ethnic groups all place far greater importance on caring than achievement. These patterns hold around the world: When people in 50 countries were asked to report their guiding principles in life, the value that mattered most was not achievement, but caring.

Despite the significance that it holds in our lives, teaching children to care about others is no simple task. In an Israeli study of nearly 600 families, parents who valued kindness and compassion frequently failed to raise children who shared those values.

Are some children simply good-natured – or not? For the past decade, I’ve been studying the surprising success of people who frequently help others without any strings attached. As the father of two daughters and a son, I’ve become increasingly curious about how these generous tendencies develop.

Genetic twin studies suggest that anywhere from a quarter to more than half of our propensity to be giving and caring is inherited. That leaves a lot of room for nurture, and the evidence on how parents raise kind and compassionate children flies in the face of what many of even the most well-intentioned parents do in praising good behavior, responding to bad behavior, and communicating their values.

By age 2, children experience some moral emotions – feelings triggered by right and wrong. To reinforce caring as the right behavior, research indicates, praise is more effective than rewards. Rewards run the risk of leading children to be kind only when a carrot is offered, whereas praise communicates that sharing is intrinsically worthwhile for its own sake. But what kind of praise should we give when our children show early signs of generosity?

Many parents believe it’s important to compliment the behavior, not the child – that way, the child learns to repeat the behavior. Indeed, I know one couple who are careful to say, “That was such a helpful thing to do,” instead of, “You’re a helpful person.”

But is that the right approach? In a clever experiment, the researchers Joan E. Grusec and Erica Redler set out to investigate what happens when we commend generous behavior versus generous character. After 7- and 8-year-olds won marbles and donated some to poor children, the experimenter remarked, “Gee, you shared quite a bit.”

The researchers randomly assigned the children to receive different types of praise. For some of the children, they praised the action: “It was good that you gave some of your marbles to those poor children. Yes, that was a nice and helpful thing to do.” For others, they praised the character behind the action: “I guess you’re the kind of person who likes to help others whenever you can. Yes, you are a very nice and helpful person.”

A couple of weeks later, when faced with more opportunities to give and share, the children were much more generous after their character had been praised than after their actions had been. Praising their character helped them internalize it as part of their identities. The children learned who they were from observing their own actions: I am a helpful person. This dovetails with new research led by the psychologist Christopher J. Bryan, who finds that for moral behaviors, nouns work better than verbs. To get 3- to 6-year-olds to help with a task, rather than inviting them “to help,” it was 22 to 29 percent more effective to encourage them to “be a helper.” Cheating was cut in half when instead of, “Please don’t cheat,” participants were told, “Please don’t be a cheater.” When our actions become a reflection of our character, we lean more heavily toward the moral and generous choices. Over time it can become part of us.

Praise appears to be particularly influential in the critical periods when children develop a stronger sense of identity. When the researchers Joan E. Grusec and Erica Redler praised the character of 5-year-olds, any benefits that may have emerged didn’t have a lasting impact: They may have been too young to internalize moral character as part of a stable sense of self. And by the time children turned 10, the differences between praising character and praising actions vanished: Both were effective. Tying generosity to character appears to matter most around age 8, when children may be starting to crystallize notions of identity.

Praise in response to good behavior may be half the battle, but our responses to bad behavior have consequences, too. When children cause harm, they typically feel one of two moral emotions: shame or guilt. Despite the common belief that these emotions are interchangeable, research led by the psychologist June Price Tangney reveals that they have very different causes and consequences.

Shame is the feeling that I am a bad person, whereas guilt is the feeling that I have done a bad thing. Shame is a negative judgment about the core self, which is devastating: Shame makes children feel small and worthless, and they respond either by lashing out at the target or escaping the situation altogether. In contrast, guilt is a negative judgment about an action, which can be repaired by good behavior. When children feel guilt, they tend to experience remorse and regret, empathize with the person they have harmed, and aim to make it right.

In one study spearheaded by the psychologist Karen Caplovitz Barrett, parents rated their toddlers’ tendencies to experience shame and guilt at home. The toddlers received a rag doll, and the leg fell off while they were playing with it alone. The shame-prone toddlers avoided the researcher and did not volunteer that they broke the doll. The guilt-prone toddlers were more likely to fix the doll, approach the experimenter, and explain what happened. The ashamed toddlers were avoiders; the guilty toddlers were amenders.

If we want our children to care about others, we need to teach them to feel guilt rather than shame when they misbehave. In a review of research on emotions and moral development, the psychologist Nancy Eisenberg suggests that shame emerges when parents express anger, withdraw their love, or try to assert their power through threats of punishment: Children may begin to believe that they are bad people. Fearing this effect, some parents fail to exercise discipline at all, which can hinder the development of strong moral standards.

The most effective response to bad behavior is to express disappointment. According to independent reviews by Professor Eisenberg and David R. Shaffer, parents raise caring children by expressing disappointment and explaining why the behavior was wrong, how it affected others, and how they can rectify the situation. This enables children to develop standards for judging their actions, feelings of empathy and responsibility for others, and a sense of moral identity, which are conducive to becoming a helpful person. The beauty of expressing disappointment is that it communicates disapproval of the bad behavior, coupled with high expectations and the potential for improvement: “You’re a good person, even if you did a bad thing, and I know you can do better.”

As powerful as it is to criticize bad behavior and praise good character, raising a generous child involves more than waiting for opportunities to react to the actions of our children. As parents, we want to be proactive in communicating our values to our children. Yet many of us do this the wrong way.

In a classic experiment, the psychologist J. Philippe Rushton gave 140 elementary- and middle-school-age children tokens for winning a game, which they could keep entirely or donate some to a child in poverty. They first watched a teacher figure play the game either selfishly or generously, and then preach to them the value of taking, giving or neither. The adult’s influence was significant: Actions spoke louder than words. When the adult behaved selfishly, children followed suit. The words didn’t make much difference – children gave fewer tokens after observing the adult’s selfish actions, regardless of whether the adult verbally advocated selfishness or generosity. When the adult acted generously, students gave the same amount whether generosity was preached or not – they donated 85 percent more than the norm in both cases. When the adult preached selfishness, even after the adult acted generously, the students still gave 49 percent more than the norm. Children learn generosity not by listening to what their role models say, but by observing what they do.

To test whether these role-modeling effects persisted over time, two months later researchers observed the children playing the game again. Would the modeling or the preaching influence whether the children gave – and would they even remember it from two months earlier?

The most generous children were those who watched the teacher give but not say anything. Two months later, these children were 31 percent more generous than those who observed the same behavior but also heard it preached. The message from this research is loud and clear: If you don’t model generosity, preaching it may not help in the short run, and in the long run, preaching is less effective than giving while saying nothing at all.

People often believe that character causes action, but when it comes to producing moral children, we need to remember that action also shapes character. As the psychologist Karl Weick is fond of asking, “How can I know who I am until I see what I do? How can I know what I value until I see where I walk?”

Adam Grant is a professor of management and psychology at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and the author of “Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success.”

The caring child: How to teach empathy (age 5)

IN THIS ARTICLE

By Mary VanClay Reviewed by the BabyCenter Medical Advisory Board Last updated: March 2017

What to expect at this age

Kids don’t have the cognitive skills to truly understand the concept of empathy until they’re 8 or 9. But 5-year-olds, usually highly preoccupied with fairness, are concerned about being treated well, and they want others – friends, strangers, even characters in books – to be treated well too. Here’s how to nurture these budding displays of empathy.

What you can do

Label the feeling. Your kindergartner will be able to understand and manage her emotions much better if she can recognize her feelings. So put a name to her behavior as often as you can. Say, for instance, “It was very kind of you to talk to that boy who was all alone on the swing. He might have been feeling lonely.” By hearing that you noticed her behavior, she’ll learn that you recognize and value her responsiveness.

She needs to understand negative emotions, too, so don’t be afraid to calmly point out when your 5-year-old’s being less than caring. Try saying, “It made your baby brother really sad when you grabbed his rattle. What could you do to help him feel better?”

Another way to teach your kindergartner to understand and define her emotions is to have a “feeling of the week.” Each week, put up on the refrigerator or bulletin board a picture of someone experiencing a basic emotion – sadness, happiness, surprise, anger. Work your way up to more complicated emotions, such as frustration, nervousness, and jealousy (clip magazine photos or illustrations that capture these feelings). Talk with your child about times when she felt the same way.

Praise empathetic behavior. When your kindergartner performs an act of kindness, tell her what she did right, and be as specific as possible: “You were very generous to share your special stickers with Tommy. I saw him smiling, and I know he was happy.”

Encourage your kindergartner to talk about her feelings – and yours. Let her know that you care about how she feels by listening intently. If she has a story about someone else (“Tommy got in trouble for shoving Therese, and I don’t think that was fair”), listen to her views before offering your own. And when she says she’s mad, paraphrase what she says – “Oh, you’re feeling grumpy today?” – so she knows you’re listening and feels encouraged to elaborate. Similarly, share your own feelings with her: “It makes me feel bad when you yell at me. Let’s think of another way for you to tell me you’re angry.”

This is also a fine time to share some of your feelings that don’t relate to your child’s actions. You can say, “I’m frustrated that I didn’t meet my deadline at work today” or “I got annoyed with Aunt Mary today, just like you get mad at your sister. But we’re still friends.”

Your 5-year-old will learn that adults have feelings and emotions too, that they’re a normal part of life, and that learning to cope with them is an important part of growing up.

Point out other people’s behavior. Teach your kindergartner to notice when someone else has behaved kindly. You might say, for example, “Remember how friendly your new teacher was on the first day of school? She helped you feel less scared.” By doing this, you reinforce her understanding of how people’s actions can affect her emotionally. Books also provide wonderful opportunities to explore emotions. Ask your 5-year-old how she thinks the children in a fairy tale are feeling, and whether she thinks she’d be scared or brave in the same situation. Tell her how you might feel too.

Teach nonverbal cues. At the playground or park, find a quiet place where you and your 5-year-old can sit and observe others without being rude. Play a game of guessing what other people are feeling, and explain the specific reasons for your own guesses: “See that man? He’s walking really quickly and his shoulders are hunched, and he’s making a mean face. I think he’s angry about something.”

Teach basic rules of politeness. Good manners are a great way for your kindergartner to show caring and respect for others. “Please” and “thank you” are phrases 5-year-olds should use automatically. Explain that you’re more inclined to hand over her sandwich when she asks for it politely and that you don’t like it when she orders you around. Even if these phrases sound rote at times, they teach kids how important it is to treat others with respect. Of course, being polite to her is worth a thousand rules and explanations. Say “please” and “thank you” regularly to your kindergartner and to others, and she’ll learn that these phrases are part of normal communication, both at home and out in public.

Don’t use anger to control your child. Though it’s easy to get upset when she sneaks the candy you told her not to eat before dinner, try not to use anger as a tool to manage her behavior. “When you say, ‘I’m really mad at you,’ children shut down and withdraw,” says Jerry L. Wyckoff, a psychologist and coauthor of Twenty Teachable Virtues. Teaching by instruction and example is much more effective, although it’s important to let your child know you’re disappointed. Instead of getting angry, take a moment to calm yourself down. Then say firmly, “I know you wanted that candy, but it upsets me that you ignored what I told you. Now you won’t be allowed to have dessert tonight.”

Give your kindergartner jobs. Research suggests that children who learn responsibility also learn altruism and caring. Five-year-olds can take over simple jobs, such as feeding the dog or clearing the dinner table. Don’t forget to pile on the praise for a job well done and point out that your child’s actions benefit everyone: “Thanks for remembering to set the table. We’re all really hungry, and you’ve helped us sit down to dinner a lot faster.”

Ask her to think of others. Each day is full of opportunities to remind your 5-year-old to think about how someone else might feel. “It’s simple – say you’re in the grocery store and your child asks for some licorice. Say, ‘Sure. Now, do you think your little sister would like us to bring home a treat for her?'” suggests Wayne Dosick, a rabbi and the author of Golden Rules: The Ten Ethical Values Parents Need to Teach Their Children.

Pay attention to your child’s social life. Asking specific questions about people in her daily life reinforces the importance of social relationships and treating people well. Questions such as “Who did you play with at recess today?” and “What did you talk to Tommy about on the bus?” can lead to discussions about treating others with respect and kindness.

Involve your kindergartner in charitable activities. Acts of kindness and charity are an excellent way to teach her empathy. When you take a meal to a sick neighbor or a friend with a new baby, let her help plan the menu. She can pack a bag of clothes to donate to a local charity and choose some of the toys she’s outgrown to give as well. Help her write a thank-you letter to Grandma for a birthday present. Explain that sometimes people need extra help, don’t have the basics that they need, or would just feel happy to receive a sign of appreciation.

Expect the same behavior from boys and girls. Our society commonly considers men to be less empathetic than women. So sometimes, even without realizing it, we demand and praise empathetic behavior less often in boys than in girls.

As Wyckoff says, “We set up this ‘boy code’ that goes on and on throughout their lives – ‘I gotta be tough.’ But if we’re careful to teach them, boys can learn empathy just like girls.”

Derin’s One-Year Review

Seen by nurse: 25/2/2013

Weight: 9.5kg

Length: 77.5cm

Age: 50 weeks

  • Seen for developmental review 8-12 months.
  • Seen with mum and friend.
  • Sitting unaided, able to walk unassisted.
  • Good hand-eye co-ordination.
  • Inquisitive and alert baby.
  • MMR given yesterday.
  • Appetite returning well after recent illness of flu and SVT.
  • Being seen by cardiologist tomorrow.
  • Moving to Australia in 2 months time.
  • No squint observed.
  • Babbling well.
  • Understanding commands.
  • Drinkng from baby beaker.
  • Bookstart pack given.
  • Weight progressing really well.
  • Sociable and happy baby. [Birthmark] on left arm reducing in size.

Derin’s Heart Drama

Emails sent by us to family (including typos)
To: Ann & Murray MacDonald
Date: Sun 17 Feb 2013, 07:30am
Hi there, don’t think there’s going to be a chat this morning unfortunately: we’ve spent the entire night in hospital with Derin.
He has had a nasty virus for the last four days and has not been reading well etc, buy last night we called NHS. They said to come in immediately. Found he had a heart rate of around 260bpm! Ie too fast to count.
Managed to bring it down but it switches back.
That was seven hours ago. They’re now trying to figure out how to get Derin to a hospital with a paediatric cardiology unit.
I’m too tired to write any more.
 
To: Murray & Ann, Richard, Ross, Hulya
Date: Sun 17 Feb 2013, 14:32
Now at Great Ormond Street (GOS) children’s hospital-Derin’s first ambulance trip. Just spoken to the cardiologist.
Long term the doc thinks there is no problem. Probably Derin has a predisposition for his heart to go crazy but it’s not uncommon and in his case seems to be only when he has a fever or something.
They want to put him on beta blocker drugs right now to settle the system but will first do a bunch of scans to make sure that the drug won’t be a little too effective at slowing his heart.
Right now he’s sleeping with a tiny bit of chemical help. He’s absolutely exhausted. He hardly slept last night or yesterday and whenever he did get to sleep he was woken about 5 minutes later, traumatic time in hospital being treated as a pin cushion (took them more than 8 attempts to get a tube in his vein – no fault of theirs; just couldn’t find the veins, with him crying the whole time and his heart rate going up to 260+ , highest I saw was 286). Now he is very suspicious of everyone. Very nice hospital we are at now. GOS is a world leading hospital and is totally dedicated to children, so I guess there aren’t many better places to be under the circumstances.
Attached photos of him sleeping are right now. The monitor is a few hours ago at Royal London Hospital.
I’m sure that Derin and Sheb will be staying here tonight. I’m looking forward to going home soon and getting some zzz. No sleep last night and only four hours the night before.
Sheb also exhausted. Of course most important thing is that he gets better soon. In this respect the cardiologist’s assessment makes us feel better than we’ve felt for several hours.
 
To: MacDs and Tuncels
Date: Tues 19 Feb 2013, 19:15

Hi there,
We're now waiting for a taxi to go home.
Derin is on beta blockers (can't remember if I've said this already) which seem to make him a bit drowsy. This will need to be checked as they think that he will be on some sort of drug until he is big enough (20kg, 5 years old) to do some "minor"surgery on - cauterise the extra nerve pathway he has in his heart. Apparently that is day surgery, not overnight!
So for the next couple of days we will probably have a sleepy boy, but in 48 hours we will have a phone consultation with the doc. If he is still sleepy they will review the medication: type and quantity.
We've got an appointment with the cardiologist on 1st march to discuss everything in our minds. This is only four days before Sheb and Derin head to Turkey. We have told them about our plans. The consultant cardiologist said that the Melbourne cardiologist (he knew him by name, Andrew Jones) is truly excellent.
We're ready for home now and looking forward to having a shower.

To: MacDs and Tuncels
Date: Sat 23 Feb 2013 11:14
Hi there.
Saturday Morning status update:
Still in hospital for observation. Derin started a new medicine (Flecainide?) on Friday evening. This is as well as his beta blockers; not instead of. Unfortunately the BBs are given to him every 8 hours, and the new one every 12, so we have 4 medicine sessions per day; inevitably when he's asleep.
Without wanting to be overly optimistic, things look fairly settled right now. His heart rate hasn't done anything interesting since Friday afternoon. It's now Saturday late morning.
Docs have said that we should expect he'll be in for the whole weeekend but there is just a chance that, if they can all agree, he/we will be released this evening.
Since Thursday we've been at Royal London Hospital, not Great Ormond Street. The difference is spectacular. How best to describe it: When we were at GOSH one of the nurses there explained to me that it is a "tertiary" care provider. I think what she meant was that e.g. your GP is primary care, hospital is secondary care, the GOSH is where you go from the hospital. She said that the ward we were on (cardiac) isn't used to having patients as well as Derin; most of the patients there are either open-heart surgery or transplants, but apparently they don't do transplants during the weekend so things were _reasonably_ quiet. Derin was classified not as a "critical care" case, but as "high care", and this was very much what it was. There was _always_ a nurse available, and they _all_ knew everything. Probably more than one nurse for every patient, so while we didn't have our own personal nurse, there were 4-5 floating around and one of them was _always_ there. It was clear that everyone had read all the notes. No-one asked stupid questions.
We arrived there on Sunday afternoon and in the evening they arranged accommodation for Sheb and me in apartments just across the road and owned by the hospital. At some point one of the nurses told Sheb and me to go and find ourselves some dinner. She recommended a restaurant, and said not to rush back; it was obvious we needed a break and she'd look after Derin. We stayed late with Derin that night, but did eventually go to our (very basic) accommodation and left Derin with probably the world's most over-qualified baby sitters.
On Monday test results came back showing he had the flu virus, so he went out of the ward (only had one other patient) to a private room for quarantine. Initially I thought that this meant we had kind of lost the immediate access to nurses (they weren't always in the room with us) but then I realised that there was one sitting at a desk just outside the room, looking through the window at Derin's heart monitor and taking notes. This was VERY high care!
Now we're at RLH. I suppose on the positive side, they're still in regular contact with GOSH, and GOSH has decided they don't need us in there, so that's got to be a good sign. However the standard of care - not just the number of nurses - is dramatically different. Sheb and Derin arrived here on Thursday afternoon. When I got there in the early evening she was going crazy - no one had given her even a cup of tea. She asked one of the nurses where she could get a tea and was told to go down to the canteen on the ground floor (we're on the 7th). When she said "And leave my baby crying here?" the nurse just shrugged. On Friday afternoon someone came round and told Sheb that mothers that are breast-feeding are given meals, and showed her where to get tea on the ward, etc etc. The staff here just seem to be incredibly badly trained/informed.
In another incident one of the nurses wanted to check Derin's readings using a different monitor, so wanted to put more sensor-stickers on his chest. She insisted on taking off the ones he had on first. He's a baby; he's got very sensitive, delicate skin. We really don't want to be pulling things off his skin if we're just going to re-stick them later. Anyway, once she'd got him thoroughly distressed by pulling all these things off, Sheb asked if she could breast-feed him or hold him to calm him down while the readings were being taken. The nurse said she couldn't because that would interfere with the readings, so Derin was left screaming in his cot, while the nurse struggled to organise everything and in a memorable quote while trying to get the machine working said "I don't know what I'm doing here". Predictably the readings she got were garbage. Fortunately at that point a doctor came along and set the machine up properly and told Sheb she could feed Derin and that it wouldn't interfere with the readings.
Now we're here for "observation". I suppose that means they want us to be in the hospital for 24 hours after starting the new drug just in case it does anything too exciting like actually stopping his heart. I hope so, because the actual amount of observation he's getting apart from by us is pretty minimal. He's attached to an ECG so he can't walk around or go anywhere other than his cot and high chair, but the ECG doesn't record anything - it only displays. So it is up to Sheb and me to note anything interesting. It seems a little inadequate in this day and age! Surely we can have a machine that records everything internally then it can be sent for analysis.
Oh, by the way, the problem Derin was having last weekend is called supraventricular tachycardia - or SVT. There's a good explanation at this wikipedia link; you google SVT Heart. Note, this is not the problem he was having on Thursday, which was much more benign tachycardia. The difference is fairly easy to see after a crash course in cardiology: If you look at an ECG chart for a healthy pulse you'll see that there are three signals in the cycle: 
1. Signal to pulse (very small), 
2. Pulse (very big), 
3. Signal to reset (quite small). 
With SVT the heart is racing because there is a short circuit in the wiring so the signal to pulse is doing multiple laps. In the chart on the wikipedia page you can see that there is no pulse signal.
Right, must post this now or it'll never happen.
Love B, S(leeping), and d.

Derin is Reading

30 December 2013

Derin has started reading.
It’s only in the past week or so that he has started talking coherently (to us). A couple of days ago he was in our bed early in the morning on a work day (he had woken too late to go back to sleep, but too early to ignore) and Sheb had got up. He was sitting in the bed and when she came into the room he patted the mattress beside him and said “Mummy, come bed. Night night.” That was 3-4 days ago.
Now today he has shown that he can read numbers. It started with something earlier today – can’t remember what right now – where he said “Five. Five” and there was a “5” on a bottle/box/label. Then this evening when Bruce was brushing Derin’s teeth Derin started pointing at a Listerine mouth wash bottle and saying “Six. Six. Six” On checking, it turned out that the label said “6 benefits” or something.
It’s crazy late – now after 10pm, but we did a quick test a few minutes ago, writing numbers on his whiteboard, and he knows 4, 5, 6, 7. He said “nine” for “2”. Unfortunately it was too late for more testing. He was too tired. Strangely, the 5, 6, 7 were said in English, with Bruce writing the numbers. When Sheb wrote “4” he said “dort” (“four”). Is this a coincidence? We don’t know… yet.
Interesting though that his first word was “bir” (“one”), his first coherent string of words was “one, two, three, …, ten”, and the first characters that he can read were “5” and “6”
More experiments tomorrow!

Counting

Derin started counting properly today. (30 December 2013)
Until now he has been saying numbers to himself or repeating after us, but this evening we were at Rich & Ali’s and Sheb was sticking magnets to the fridge and he was counting them “one, two, three” etc as she put them on. Then when she started him off in Turkish he carried on counting in Turkish.
In English he could count all the way to ten. In Turkish he could get to 8 (“sekiz”) but couldn’t remember 9 (“dokuz”), so he skips that and goes straight to 10 (“on”).

Baby pronouns

Today (8 December 2013) Derin pointed at a photo of himself (the halloween one when he was about 6 months old) and said “me”.
This is very interesting for two reasons:

He recognises himself and knows that he is a person/thing that can be in photos.

He said “me”. Normally young babies will say “you” when they are referring to themselves because that is what they hear everyone else referring to them as.

Using similes

Recently Derin has made a new linguistic development.

A week ago Derin told me that the garage was a cave. Then 3-4 days ago he changed that. Now the garage is LIKE a cave.

A couple of days ago he also said that one of his toys was LIKE a tunnel (it was one of thoes spiral wire things to run beads along).

This seems to be an important linguistic/logical distinction that he is now making.