By Michael Harrison, Parenting & Youth Development
The traditional model of discipline—grounding, yelling, taking away the Xbox—often fails. It provokes rebellion in strong-willed boys or breeds resentment in sensitive ones. But there is a growing movement among educators, sports coaches, and child psychologists that offers a better way. It is called discipline4boys work
If you have ever uttered the phrase, “I’ve told you a hundred times,” while staring at a teenage boy’s pile of dirty laundry, unfinished homework, or disrespectful tone, you are not alone. Raising boys in a distracted, dopamine-driven age is arguably harder than it has ever been. By Michael Harrison, Parenting & Youth Development The