Help your kids stop procrastinating

Mother talking to her teenage daughter

It is easy for children to waste time when they have responsibilities to do. They may prefer to do other things like watch TV or play with their toys. What matters is that your children learn what to procrastinate or getting in the habit of procrastinating will not do you any good.

While it is true that procrastinating from time to time, and thinking about how to do things later is not a bad thing, and in fact it is advisable if you know how to use it well, it is also true that abusing procrastination can make your children convert in lazy people. But how can you help your kids stop procrastinating?

Be in control

When your children are young, you are in control of their destiny and their time, therefore, you will have to take care of it to set a good example. Help him to achieve his goals, to learn to organize himself, to know what is the first thing to do and what to leave for later ... Once he has learned this, you can stop being in control and allow your child to advance independently, but knowing that if he needs you, he will be by his side to help him.

Divide and conquer

Dividing large, stressful-looking tasks into smaller, more manageable chunks is a great way to advance a task you've been avoiding. What that does is set you on the path to progress, and it makes you realize that you can achieve it.

Good example for teenage children

Put it on the calendar

If your child is continually putting off a project, you will need to teach him to be able to set aside time to make it happen. If you really schedule on your calendar you will know that you have to and will be able to organize your time.

For it to work, you need to be strategic when scheduling. If your child is most productive in the morning then the tasks that require attention should be at this time.

A partner of responsibility

It could be a friend, you as a parent, or a private teacher. The point is to find someone you can lean on when you feel trapped. That person could help you in two ways: They could follow up to make sure they did what they said they were going to do, and pay attention so they can talk about things. Unzipping and getting things off your chest can really do a lot to make you feel better. and refocus on the task at hand.

Create a reward system

If your child has a reward system, he may feel much more motivated to achieve the goals he has in mind and stop procrastinating on time. The reward depends on what counts as a gift for your child. Maybe you want to take a break to look at Instagram or go for a walk. Or it could be a manicure or movie tickets. You have to make sure it is something special and out of the ordinary…. This is key to using a reward system and breaking the procrastination cycle.


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