World Languages, asked by Anonymous, 9 hours ago

You are Rahul/Rohini. You have come to realize the importance of discipline in public and
private spaces. Prepare a speech in about 120 words, encouraging your schoolmates to follow
certain rules and maintain discipline when they go for excursions so as to keep our picnic spots
clean and attractive.

answer correclty or your answer will be deleted

Answers

Answered by deveshwarans06
1

Answer:

Parenting

Parenting

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Article

How to discipline your child the smart and healthy way

Positive discipline for better mental and physical health and a happy childhood.

Parenting in Paraguay: a father holds his 2-year old daughter atop the bicycle that serves as the family's transportation and mobile food-sales cart

UNICEF

There comes a time when every parent struggles with how best to discipline their child. Whether dealing with a screaming toddler or an angry teen, it can be hard to control your temper. No parent wants to find themselves in such a situation and the bottom line is that shouting and physical violence never help.

Thankfully, there are other, more effective ways and one of them is positive discipline. We consulted Lucie Cluver, Oxford University professor of Child and Family Social Work and mother of two young boys, to explore how the approach can help parents build positive relationships with their children and teach skills like responsibility, cooperation and self-discipline.

Explanation:

Parents don't want to shout or hit their kids. We do it because we're stressed and don't see another way,” says Professor Cluver.

The evidence is clear: shouting and hitting simply do not work and can do more harm than good in the long run. Repeated shouting and hitting can even adversely impact a child’s entire life. The continued “toxic stress” it creates can lead to a host of negative outcomes like higher chances of school dropout, depression, drug use, suicide and heart disease.

“It’s like saying: here's this medicine, it's not going to help you and it's going to make you sick,” says Professor Cluver. “When we know something doesn't work, that's a pretty good reason to look for a different approach.”

Rather than punishment and what not to do, the positive discipline approach puts an emphasis on developing a healthy relationship with your child and setting expectations around behaviour. The good news for every parent is it works and here’s how you can start putting it into practice

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