
How to Motivate Kids to Do Well in School
Do you have trouble motivating your children to
study? It’s a common problem that I see in my coaching work with pre-teens and
teens. I notice that many parents approach this problem in the wrong way. In
this article, I’m going to explain 10 principles for motivating children to do
well in school.
1. Don’t annoy your children
One of the keys to motivating your children to
work hard is not to annoy them. This may seem odd at first, as we’re used to
parents getting annoyed with children, not vice versa.
But relationships are a two-way street, and
parents can also annoy children. If your children are continually upset with
you over things you say or do, they will find it hard to listen to you. You may
have some great wisdom to offer them, but your children won’t be receptive to
your advice.
Parents often engage in power struggles with
their children. For some of us, these are habits we learned from our own childhoods.
But power struggles with your children consume a lot of energy. And that’s
energy that could be spent on something more constructive.
Another habit to avoid is making comments that
suggest your child isn’t good enough.
This may be something you’re not aware that you
do. It may be very subtle. For example, take the statement: “You’re improving,
but I know you can do better.” On the surface, it sounds like encouragement.
But you’re actually telling your child that he or she isn’t good enough. Or take
a statement that begins: “When I was your age…” These kinds of statements
usually involve a comparison that leaves your children feeling bad. So avoid
making these types of comments.
Another trap that parents fall into is
comparing their children with someone else’s. Parents often hope that these
comparisons will inspire their children to do better. Unfortunately, these
comments have the opposite effect.
“I hear that John got A’s in all his subjects
the last term” may seem like an innocent remark. But it’s a comparison that
leaves your child feeling worse about himself or herself.
This is not the way to motivate your children.
Sometimes, parents try to motivate their
children by giving them lectures. But lectures tend to make children feel
powerless and resentful. Instead of lecturing your children, discuss the issue
with them and ask them what they think. This is much more effective than
lecturing them.
Why?
Because it gets them involved, and makes them
part of the solution.
2. Give your children a sense of control
If you want to motivate your children, they
need to feel as if they’re in control of their lives. Being motivated comes
from knowing that you can shape your future through the actions you take today.
But if children feel as if their parents are in complete (or almost complete)
control, they will have little motivation.
Some parents hover over their children. They
micromanage every last detail of their children’s lives. The result is that the
children never develop a sense that they’re responsible for their education and
their lives.
By empowering your children, they’ll develop a
sense of autonomy and responsibility. Talk to your children regularly about
expectations and consequences. As a parent, I’m sure you have expectations of
your children. For example, you may expect them to keep their room tidy – and
there may be consequences for not doing that.
Learning to be responsible in one area (keeping
their room tidy) encourages them to be responsible in other areas of life, such
as studying. With this approach, you still need to be involved in your
children’s lives. The difference is that instead of hovering and micromanaging,
you create boundaries around your involvement.
For example, you can make it clear to your
children that you’re available to answer homework-related questions every
weeknight between 8 pm and 9 pm.
This way, your children will develop the
ability to motivate themselves. They’ll know that they alone are responsible
for making sure their homework gets done. In contrast, consider children whose
parents nag them every day to do their homework. Those children won’t develop
the ability to motivate themselves.
3. Develop routines and structure
Routines and structure play a crucial role in
developing motivation in your children. Having established routines in family
life eliminates a majority of conflicts. Take homework, for example.
Let’s say you have an established routine that
your children do their homework every weeknight between 7 pm and 9 pm. There
won’t be conflict related to homework, because it’s simply “the way we do
things in this family”.
But in a family without routines, ensuring that
your children do their homework becomes a daily battle. Of course, even
established routines sometimes need to be reinforced or modified. For example,
now and again you may need to say something like: “When you’ve completed your
homework, you can go to Melissa’s house.”
To create a homework routine, it’s a good idea
to set up a small part of the house as a study area. Having a study area that’s
free of distractions will help your children develop a homework routine.
It may also help your children if you also
devote that period of time to doing your own “homework”. This could be paying
bills online, taking an online course, or reading a book to learn about a new
topic.
4. Equipping Kids with Planning & Organizational
Skills
As parents, we (hopefully) have planning and organizational
skills that we’ve developed over the years. But we often take these skills for
granted, and forget that our children don’t yet have those skills. Pre-teens
and teens can feel overwhelmed, frustrated, and stressed because of the demands
they face at school. In response, many of them give up and turn to videos and
games as a form of escape. Some pre-teens and teens might even say they hate
school.
But if they have planning and organizational
skills, their attitude toward school and academics will be different. One organizational
skill you can teach your children is to break down big tasks into smaller
tasks. Some people call this “chunking down”. This technique makes any task
more manageable and doable.
Another skill you can teach your children is
list-making. Lists are at the heart of all organizational skills, so this is a
great place to start. You could teach your children how to use a list to pack
their bag for a school camp or a school outing.
Planning is another organizational skill that
will reduce your children’s stress related to school and exams. Planning
involves placing lists of tasks to be completed within a certain timeframe.
This way, your children will learn to complete tasks one by one instead of
leaving them until it’s so late that they feel overwhelmed. For example, if
your children have exams coming up, you could teach them how to:
·
Break down their revision material into a
series of tasks
·
Use a calendar to plan how they’re going to
complete those tasks within a set timeframe
5. Process is More Important than Outcome
The writer Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: “Life
is a journey, not a destination.”
This principle applies to study skills and tips
as much as it does to life in general. When motivating your children to do well
in school, focus on the process and not the results. If your children are too
focused on results, there’s a danger that when they don’t achieve the results
they want, they’ll give up. What’s more, when we focus only on results, the
process becomes a “necessary evil”.
The process becomes something we go through
grudgingly because we want a certain result.
But this approach doesn’t encourage a love of
learning. We live in an age when learning is a skill that we need to practice
throughout our lives. The world is changing faster than ever before. As such,
we all need to be continually learning. And that’s why it’s important to focus
on the process, not the results.
Cultivate in your children a love of learning
for its own sake, not just as a means to achieve a goal. At the end of the day,
achieving goals is a by-product of the systems and processes that we follow. For
example, as a concert pianist, you may have a goal to play Mozart’s Piano
Concerto No. 15 in B-flat major without making a single mistake.
The system or process that makes it possible to
reach that goal is how often you practice, how you break down and learn
difficult cadenzas, and how you incorporate feedback from your music teacher.
When teaching children how to study and how to
motivate themselves, it’s vital that you focus on the process and not the
outcome.
6. Create a family culture where it’s OK to
make mistakes
We learn more from our failures than we do from
our successes. Thomas Edison made an extraordinary number of unsuccessful
attempts at inventing the electric light bulb. When a reporter asked him how it
felt to fail 1,000 times, Edison replied: “I didn’t fail 1,000 times. The light
bulb was an invention with 1,000 steps.”
Unfortunately, we live in an age that places
enormous emphasis on instant success. Failure isn’t tolerated. Parents correct
their children’s homework to improve their grades. They argue with teachers who
try to point out areas where their children need to improve. Yet making
mistakes is an essential part of learning.
We must learn from our mistakes and correct
them, much like a ship that frequently adjusts its course to stay on the
correct bearing. If you want to motivate your children to study hard and do
well in school, one of the best things you can do is create a family culture
where it’s OK to make mistakes.
One way to do this is to share with your
children your own mistakes and what you learned from them. For example, maybe
you went to university to study one field and ended up switching to a different
field when you started work. By sharing that experience with your children,
you’re showing them that they don’t have to get it “right” the first time.
If you want to teach your children to love
learning, one thing you should avoid at all costs is focusing too much on their
failures. Instead of criticizing them for their failures, help them to identify
what they’ve learned from their mistakes.
A study by Stanford University has shown that
children who are praised for their effort work harder and give up less easily. On
the other hand, children who are afraid of failure are more likely to become
discouraged when they make mistakes. Instead of learning from their mistakes
and moving on, they’re likely to give up altogether.
7. Empathies with your children and practise
active listening
Pre-teens and teens are going through a lot of
changes, both physically and mentally. It’s also a time when they may start
displaying problematic behaviors, such as aggression, mood swings, being
argumentative, and defying established rules. As a parent, it’s natural for
these kinds of behaviors to become the center of your attention – they’re
problems that you want to solve.
But it’s actually better not to focus on these behaviors.
Instead, try to understand your children’s perspective.
How do they feel about the situation? What
opinions do they have?
To understand your children better, you’ll need
to practice active listening. Active listening occurs when we give our full
attention to what someone is saying. This means that you aren’t multitasking
while your children are talking to you. It means that you aren’t checking your
phone or writing a list of things to do.
Active listening means not interrupting your
children while they’re talking. It means not judging them or moralizing about
something they did. It means not offering unsolicited advice. You can show your
children that you’re giving them your full attention by saying things like “go
on” and “tell me more”.
Now and again, summarize your understanding of
what your children have been saying. For example, you could say: “It sounds as
if there’s a ‘cool’ group of kids in your class, and that you’re feeling
excluded by them.”
This indicates to your child that you’re
actively listening. It’s also a way of checking that you understand what he or
she is saying. Some parents think that if only they could make their children
understand some fundamental principle, the whole problem would disappear.
But often what pre-teens and teens need most is
not to understand; they need to feel understood. When they don’t feel
understood, they become defiant. On the other hand, when they feel understood,
it creates a space where they feel safe. And that, in turn, creates an
environment where they’re open to looking at the problem in a new light.
8. Show an interest in all aspects of your
children’s lives
One of the keys to motivating your children to
do well in school is to show an interest in all aspects of their lives, not
just their academics. If your only concern is how your children are doing in
school, they may begin to feel as if they’re being treated as a project instead
of as a person. This can lead to them feeling resentful. And resentment will
result in resistance to anything related to studying.
Treat your child as a whole person, not as a
project or problem. Listen to your children when they talk about their
interests. Encourage them to get involved in non-school activities, like dance
or drama or athletics. How pre-teens and teens spend their time is crucial to
their overall development. An approach that focuses entirely on studying won’t
help your children to develop in a balanced way.
Learning a musical instrument, playing a team
sport, and taking an online course on entrepreneurship are all activities that
will help your children to develop holistically. These non-academic activities
will give your children a much-needed break from their studies and will
actually help them to do better academically in the long run.
9. Help your children to find a mentor
According to research by North Carolina State
University, children who have mentors are more likely to become successful. A
mentor is an adult who acts as a role model for your children. One of the
benefits of your children having a mentor is that they will understand a
perspective on life from someone who isn’t their parent.
The mentor’s values and attitudes may be
similar to yours. But those values will mean more to your children when they’re
modelled by someone outside the family. One reason for this is that children
inevitably become accustomed to their parents’ viewpoints and begin to tune
their parents out. Having a mentor is a chance for your children to re-engage
with those values, from a fresh perspective.
A mentor can be particularly helpful when
there’s an ongoing conflict between parents and children. In this kind of
situation, your children can benefit from having a neutral third party they can
turn to. The mentor may help your children to see the issues from a new
perspective. So where can you find a mentor for your children?
·
A mentor could be:
·
A sports coach, art teacher or music teacher
·
A neighbor or family friend
·
One of your co-workers
Someone who runs a coaching/mentoring programmer
(I’m not ashamed to say that I fall into this category of people, because it’s
extremely rewarding work)
10. Don’t use rewards, punishments or threats
As a parent, it’s tempting to use rewards,
punishments or threats to motivate your children to behave in a certain way. Research
has shown this approach doesn’t work in the long term. There are three reasons
in particular that rewards and punishments are to be avoided. Firstly, rewards
and punishments are bad for your relationship with your children.
They teach your children that they’re loved for
what they do and not for who they are. Children who grow up unsure that they’re
loved for who they are tend to make poor life choices later on.
Secondly, rewards and punishments may get
short-term results, but they ignore the underlying issue: Why is your child not
motivated? It’s much better to address the root cause than to use a Band-Aid
approach of rewards and punishments.
Thirdly, rewards and punishments put your
children’s focus entirely on outcomes. Your children’s level of motivation is
based on the promise of the reward or the threat of the punishment.
Rewards, punishments and threats don’t teach
your children how to develop intrinsic motivation. They don’t cultivate in your
children a love of learning. As mentioned earlier in this article, it’s better
to focus on the process and not the outcome. This way, your children will
develop self-discipline and a sense of responsibility. So what should you do
instead of using rewards and punishments?
Discuss with your children the joy (and
benefits) of learning and studying. Explain to them that most rewarding careers
require an investment of time and effort. But it’s also important to explain to
your children that the process itself is rewarding, even though it will involve
sacrifices. Discuss with your children what their hopes and aspirations are. Help
them to dream big and dare to fail – and model for them how you’re doing the
same in your own life.
This approach produces the kind of intrinsic
motivation and self-discipline that will last a lifetime.
Conclusion
These ten principles will help you to build in your child a deeper motivation to work hard. Some of these principles, like establishing routines and structure, may take a while to implement. But other tips and principles you can put into practice right away. For example, you can start practicing active listening today. I’m confident you’ll start seeing positive results. Wishing you all the best on this challenging but meaningful journey! Like this article? Please share it with your friends.

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