Honesty
Honesty is a virtue; and can be
taught to children.
Teaching the value of honesty to children is part of the
development of moral and emotional strength. The quality of
honesty helps to develop character and solid self-esteem.
Here is what parents need to know about teaching honesty.
Overall tips for parents:
Lessons about honesty are learned differentially, depending
on the child’s age. If you start the teaching of honesty
early on, you can continue to support this virtue, as your
children get older.
Explain to your child what honesty means at his/her
developmental level. Use words that they can understand at
their ages.
Teaching honesty by example is very effective. “Do-as-I-do”
is a better motto than the proverbial, “Do-as-I-say,
not-as-I-do.” Be honest with children at a level that they
can understand. When deciding what to tell a child about a
given situation, take into account the child’s age and
maturity, and to what extent it is in the child’s best
interest to know whatever it is you are considering telling
him. Talking about personal adult issues with a child does
not necessarily teach honesty, but may raise anxiety levels
instead.
Teaching by example means that you conduct your own
personal and business affairs in an honest and ethical
manner. By doing so you will be demonstrating the
self-respect that accompanies ethical behavior.
Us a no-shaming policy when children mess up. Children will
be more likely to revert to dishonest behaviors if they
fear being shamed. Approval is a strong motivator. Non
shaming disapproval can help to teach, but shame dissolves
strength of character, and tends to elicit the behaviors
you want to extinguish.
Respond rather than overreact when children lie or
dissemble. It is natural for children to test. Your
response will teach them to be honest, or to hide. Do not
demand (or expect) perfection. Keep consequences for
transgressions equal to the “crime,” and always as
consistent as possible.
Short consequences work best.
If dishonesty has become chronic at any age, consider the
underlying root causes.
The child may be acting out something that is troubling
him. Seek help from a professional if appropriate. Social
workers are trained to help in these situations.
Examples for the Ages:
Teaching honesty to little
ones:
A
good way to teach moral development to small children is to
use stories.
You might look for books with stories about honesty or make
one up.
One idea is to create a little character that can become an
alter ego for your child. I have used a rabbit named “Bumpy
the Bunny.” Bumpy gets into all sorts of problems, some are
caused by his/her not being honest.
Stories can demonstrate consequences for not being honest
in a way that will grab the child’s interest and keep the
story line close enough for the child to identify, and far
enough removed to keep shame at bay. This is an effective
method for helping a child to process an incident of
dishonesty he or she has actually experienced. Depending on
your “plotline” of the moment, you can ask questions such
as:
“What could Bumpy the Bunny have done instead?”
“What do you think Bumpy felt when the other bunnies lied?”
“Do you think Bumpy felt good about herself when she lied
to her mother?”
Teaching honesty to kids from very young through
adolescence.
Using words that the child can understand, explain what
honesty means in your family. Then continue to remind the
child:
“This is the way we do things in our family.”
“We tell the truth.”
“We do not take what is not ours.”
“If we have done something dishonest, we own up to it.”
“We tell the truth even when it is hard to do.”
“When you tell the truth people will respect you, and you
will feel better about yourself.”
“I might not like what you have to tell me, and there might
be a consequence, but I will respect you for telling the
truth.”
For example, little Emily, 5 years old, wanted to use the
special hand-wipes that her mother had put in a basket. She
wanted a lot of them. Her mother noticed that Emily had her
hand under her t-shirt and had a sheepish look on her face.
“What are you doing, Em’?” Mother asked.
“Nothing.”
“Em’ please let me see what you have.” Mother gently
removes the hand-wipes from under the t-shirt. “Emily, you
do not have to take these when I am not looking. You can
tell me if you want to use these. I may allow you to have
only one at a time, but in our family we do not take things
without asking permission. That is part of being honest.”
If an older child does something like this, it is worth
considering a simple consequence such as putting the
hand-wipes back and organizing the basket. Refrain from
attacking the child’s character. The parent might also
consider what might be the function of the dishonest
behavior. One such possibility would be to act out
something that is bothering the child.
Special considerations for adolescents.
All kids test. Teens test and try your patience. They sneak
out, sneak cigarettes, hang with the wrong crowd,
experiment with drugs and alcohol and engage in many other
ingenious behaviors that might make the parent think all
the lessons on honesty (and every other virtue) have been
lost.
The key advice is not to “freak out.” Keep your concern in
perspective and refrain from shaming. Have well thought out
consequences that the child is aware of and adhere to them.
Predictability and consistency will help instill the values
you want to impart. Follow through is very important. If
dishonesty and acting out become chronic, seek professional
help, as this may be indicative of a deeper problem that
needs to be addressed.