How to Respond to Defiant Behavior the Montessori Way - Volcano Mama (2024)

“No!” my five-year-old declared, “Cleaning up toys is boring.” He’s usually pretty helpful cleaning up his room and enjoys helping around the house, but sometimes he gets in a mood. When that happens, it can be tempting to turn his defiance into a power struggle. Should I force him into cleaning his room, using my power over him as his mother? It’s certainly tempting. But, what’s the Montessori way to approach defiance?

How to Respond to Defiant Behavior the Montessori Way - Volcano Mama (1)

Here’s how we try to respond to defiance the Montessori way:

Show Empathy

Don’t we all feel frustrated or upset when we are faced with doing something we don’t really want to do? I know I don’t always feel like cleaning or doing work, but, I don’t always get to do exactly what I feel like doing. Sometimes I like to vent to my husband or friends about a task in front of me.

So, when my son says that “cleaning is boring,” it’s really quite understandable. Although children at different ages express themselves in different ways, essentially, the message they’re sending is “I don’t want to do what you’ve asked me.” We have to remember that we don’t always want to do what we have to do either. Although we might not throw a tantrum because we know how to handle our feelings in a more mature way, this might be the way our children choose to tell us “No! I don’t want to do that!”

When facing children’s behaviors and activities Montessori said, to

“Respect all the reasonable forms of activity in which the child engages and try to understand them.”

A part of this is attempting to understand my child’s feelings. I can help by naming his feeling and validating it. In this way, I show empathy for his situation. In response to my son not wanting to clean his room, I might say, “Yeah, it can feel boring to clean. I don’t always feel like cleaning either.”

However, this doesn’t mean he’s off the hook.

Limits and Choices

Montessori believed in allowing children a certain level of freedom within limits. The Montessori philosophy encourages parents and teachers to create an environment where many negative behaviors are actually prevented because most of the child’s needs are fully met.

In the Montessori classroom, limits are clear. Children who use materials incorrectly must return the materials to the shelf, usually after a warning. Children who are unable to respect others who are concentrating must stay close to the teacher or are even asked to sit out until they can participate respectfully again. At home, we can use a similar approach to set limits while still fostering independence by giving choices.

In the example of my son not wanting to clean his room, I might say, “Would you like to clean your room now or in 10 minutes?” Or, I might set a limit such as “You can clean your room now, or I’ll clean up and put away the toys for a week.” This limit shows my son that he must be responsible for his toys, otherwise, he’ll lose the privilege of having them available in his room.

Natural consequences are a great way to explain to children why you need them to comply. For example, “If you leave your toys out, someonemight step on them and break them.” Or, “When you leave toys out, it’s dangerous because I might trip over them.” This approach offers an easy way to explain why you need your child to put a jacket on or why they can’t have ice cream for dinner either. All you have to do is state the practical reasons that you can’t allow your child to do or have what they want.

Struggling with limits on screen time? Kids love screens, and if you choose to use screens in your home, it can be a sore point of struggle between parent and child. I outsource this task to a timer. When the timer goes off, screen time is over. We enforce this rule very consistently and the kids now almost always immediately bring us the device when the timer goes off.

Follow Through

Children are constantly testing limits. In order to make your child feel safe, you have to enforce the limits you set. I don’t know where I saw this, but I loved this analogy that perfectly describes why limits are so important:

When you go to an amusem*nt park and the staff pull a lap bar down over your legs, what’s the first thing you do? Jiggle the lap bar. You check to make sure it’s secure. From toddlerhood through to their teenage years, children need us to be a solid lap bar that won’t budge. This doesn’t mean we should be unreasonable, unwilling to negotiate or cruel about it – it just means we have to use limits when necessary.

That means if my son doesn’t pick up his toys and I’ve said that I’ll put the toys away for a week, I have to follow through. Believe me, all it takes is one or two times of following through on an issue and your child will understand. Even though my son still complains about cleaning his room occasionally, I state the consequence (losing toy privileges) and he cleans up. He’s also lived through the natural consequences of leaving toys out. They’ve gotten broken or lost as a result. All he usually needs is a reminder of what happens when toys aren’t cleaned up to get the motivation he needs to put things away.

For the youngest of children, you can also perform a task alongside your child and gently enforce compliance. This means if your young child refuses to put on a jacket, you can offer a choice, “Either you put it on, or I’ll help you do it.” Then, if a choice isn’t made, you can gently put the jacket on your child. Empathize with them when they get upset about it. “You didn’t want to put on the jacket, you’re upset. I know it’s hard.” The same goes for cleaning up. Encourage your child to clean up with you and help them in the process until they are old enough to complete the task on their own.

Use Montessori Praise

You can help encourage your child’s good behavior through descriptive praise. This means you describe the positive actions you see your child doing and explain why they’re helpful. Instead of a generic “good job” after your child has complied with a request (which can actually just inflate your child’s ego without many benefits), you might say “Now that your room’s clean, it’s easier to walk around.” Or, “Now that your jacket is on, you’ll be warm outside.”

Defiant behavior can be difficult to manage at times. It’s so easy for these moments to devolve into a power struggle of “Why can’t you just listen?!” and “Stop complaining!” or worse. However, if you can keep your wits about you by taking a deep breath and face your child with empathy and firm limits, the outcomes will be much more positive. Over time, your child will learn to regulate their emotions, and these encounters will go much more smoothly.

Now, you tell me, how do you handle defiant behavior?

Need more help with social skills and discipline? Check out my book,Montessori at Home Guide: Gentle Parenting Techniques to Help Your 2 to 6-Year-Old Learn Social Skills and Discipline.

How to Respond to Defiant Behavior the Montessori Way - Volcano Mama (2024)

FAQs

How to respond to defiant behavior? ›

When responding to defiant behavior, do not punish in the moment. Instead, tell your child that you are disappointed and will discuss the consequences later. This gives you time to calm down and your child time to think over his actions. If you respond in the moment, you may react in a combative manner.

How does Montessori handle behavior issues? ›

Rather than teaching children what not to do, using negative reinforcement to motivate good behavior, we use positive reinforcement to encourage behaviors children are already exhibiting. The Montessori model uses a specific type of positive reinforcement language to encourage good behavior.

What is the Montessori approach to aggressive behavior? ›

We will not give a child a time-out or scold them with humiliation. We want to remain neutral in an elevated time of aggression so the child does not feel the desire to do the harmful act again. We explain why aggression is not courteous to our friends, and then we move on by redirecting them to a new choice of work.

How to deal with an extremely defiant child? ›

Model the calm behavior that you wish your child to exhibit as you deal with the situation, and take a long-term approach to correcting defiance. When you praise desirable behaviors and refuse to engage emotionally with their defiant acting out, a more compliant child will eventually emerge.

How to deal with defiant behavior in the classroom? ›

Here are 7 techniques teachers can use to deal with defiance in the classroom.
  1. Prepare, Prepare, Prepare. There is no stronger classroom management technique than preparation. ...
  2. Remain Calm. ...
  3. Your Words Matter. ...
  4. Praise Positive Behavior. ...
  5. Let Them Know You Care. ...
  6. Give Them an Incentive. ...
  7. Ask for Help. ...
  8. Dealing With Defiant Students.
Apr 13, 2020

How to redirect defiant behavior? ›

Redirection techniques
  1. Give them a choice. Giving children a choice gives them a sense of value and also helps build their confidence. ...
  2. Ignore the behavior. ...
  3. Use a distraction. ...
  4. Redirect their energy. ...
  5. Give them a hug. ...
  6. Set clear expectations. ...
  7. Use positive reinforcement. ...
  8. Avoid power struggles.

How do you discipline Montessori style? ›

Discipline: Four Tips from the Montessori Perspective
  1. Use clear language to emphasize causality. For example, use if-then phrasing.
  2. Help the child consider the natural consequences of various choices.
  3. Permit maximum freedom within a range of choices.
  4. Validate a child's emotions.

How is discipline handled in Montessori? ›

Instead, Montessori discipline is about cultivating the child's own self-discipline, as it springs from the children themselves. The child learns from you the correct way to behave, and they learn why, primarily through natural consequences, not punishment.

What is Montessori manipulative? ›

Manipulatives are not mere tools; they are gateways to mathematical exploration and discovery. These physical objects and materials serve as bridges between the concrete and the abstract, allowing children to touch, move, and interact with mathematical concepts in tangible ways.

What is not allowed in Montessori? ›

You may or may not already know, but Montessori schools discourage the introduction of fantasy to young children (children under the ages of 5 or 6). This means we do not use play kitchens, have a dress-up area in the classroom, or rely on books with dragons and fairies.

How to settle a child in Montessori? ›

How do children settle into the Montessori Environment?
  1. Stage One: Safe, Secure and Connected. The first step towards settling a new student into the Montessori environment is to help the child feel safe, secure, and connected. ...
  2. Stage Two: Mastering Routines. ...
  3. Stage Three: Experiencing Concentration.

What to say to a defiant child? ›

Using Love and Logic principles, here are three steps that helped a parent deal with her defiant son.
  1. Step 1: Stay calm and say, “No problem. I love you too much to argue about this. ...
  2. Step 2: Be quiet. ...
  3. Step 3: Let sincere empathy and consequences do the teaching.
May 3, 2023

How to speak to a defiant child? ›

7 Simple Ways to Disarm Defiant Children:
  1. Validate their feelings. Look beyond what your child is saying, to what they might be feeling. ...
  2. Say yes, with structure. ...
  3. Agree with them. ...
  4. Use "and also," not "but." ...
  5. Turn it into a game. ...
  6. Use mirroring. ...
  7. Just ignore it.
Aug 30, 2015

How to get a defiant child to cooperate? ›

Five Tips to Encourage Cooperation with Defiant Kids and Teens
  1. Check Your Nonverbal Communication. Kids pick up on more than we think — especially our tone and body language. ...
  2. Use Fewer Words. ...
  3. Use Positive Instructions. ...
  4. Pick Your Battles. ...
  5. Reinforce Expected Behavior with Positive Feedback.
May 14, 2021

How do you respond to oppositional defiance? ›

Lifestyle and home remedies
  1. Recognize and praise your child's positive behaviors as close to the time you see them as possible. ...
  2. Model the behavior you want your child to have. ...
  3. Pick your battles and avoid power struggles. ...
  4. Set limits by giving clear instructions and using consistent reasonable consequences.
Jan 4, 2023

How to talk to someone with oppositional defiant disorder? ›

Use a calm voice when dealing with ODD in kids.

A child with Oppositional Defiant Disorder is often hoping to engage his or her parents in a battle of wills. Explain in as few words as possible your position or parental requirement then do not continue to discuss the issue.

How do you respond to disruptive behavior? ›

What to do
  1. Be steady, consistent and firm.
  2. Acknowledge the feelings of the individual.
  3. Remember that disruptive behavior is often caused by stress or frustration.
  4. Address the disruption individually, directly and immediately.
  5. Be specific about the behavior that is disruptive and set limits.

How do you fix defiant disorder? ›

For teens, talk therapy (psychotherapy), learning social skills, and getting help with schoolwork can all help reduce problem behaviors. School-based programs can also help to stop bullying and improve relationships among teens. Parent-management training programs are also important.

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