Early Childhood Intervention
This website is a place for families who are facing
challenges pertaining to their child's development and
growth.
It is a place to find answers and practical
suggestions. That's what Early Intervention Support is all
about.

Whether a family has a child with a challenging behavior,
a disability or developmental issue, childhood is short - it
should be savored and enjoyed.
Learn More:
Ask a Therapist

We understand developmental milestones and the challenges
of Special Needs children. We spend a great deal of time
with families understanding the inner workings of childhood
routines and interactions. Ask us about your child today!
Ask a Therapist
Positive Methods to Change Behavior
Here is a compiled list of proven strategies you can use to
help your child learn how to behave:
What Doesn't Work
- Yelling
- Scolding
- Lecturing
- Threatening
- Bribing
- Spanking
- Name calling
- Criticizing
- Sending your child to bed
What Does Work
- Ignore. If your child is having a
temper tantrum, calmly leave the room and ignore him/her.
(You can ignore interrupting, nagging, silly questions,
siblings bickering, whining, stuttering, I hate you
statements. Never ignore if your child is hurting someone
else or themselves or breaking something on purpose.)
- Change the situation. If your children
are fighting, have them stop playing together until they can
calm down and play nicely.
- Change the environment. Your toddler
keeps playing with your cell phone, so do not leave it out
where he/she can reach it.
- Say what you want. Tell your child want
you want him/her to do instead of what you do not want
him/her to do. Say, Remember, we must walk inside. instead
of saying, Do not run!
- Distract.
There is only one red ball. Your child and his cousin
both want the red ball. Pick up your child and have him help
you feed the fish.
- Take away a privilege. Your older
child teases your younger child. Tell the older he cannot
stay up and watch his favorite TV show.
- Positive feedback. Your child cleans
up his/her toys before you ask. Remember to give a hug and a
thank you.
- If-then. If you clean up your room,
then we can go to the park.
- Prevent. If your child always wants to
walk around in the restaurant, tell him before you enter
that he must sit in his seat. Reward your child for his good
behavior.
- Accept Tolerate. Its a warm day in
July and your child puts on his winter boots. You think it
looks crazy, but you let her wear them.
- Catch them being good. Your child
repeatedly leaves his books on the floor. He puts them back
on the bookcase without you asking him. Tell him, You put
away your books all by yourself. That's great! Look for
other times you can catch your child behaving the way you
want him to and then provide praise.
- Active listening. Your child tells you,
Josh isn't my friend anymore. I hate him! You respond, It
sounds like Josh made you mad. Why do you feel this way?
- Charts and stars. Give your child a
visual reminder of every time he or she does something
right. For example, focus on one problem. Lets say your
daughter never cleans up her toys. Give her a star for every
day she cleans up. After three stars on her chart, she would
get a reward.
Techniques for Building Positive Habits
Parenting Tips in Other Areas IncludeLearn More About Early InterventionTherapy OptionsThankfully, there are many ways to deal with childhood developmental
delays and behaviors. These include in-home services, outpatient (you take
your child to a clinic), inpatient (following injury or surgery) and school
based services. Which type of therapy should you choose? Visit our Therapy Options
area to learn more.
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