Is there harm in having older children look after their younger siblings?
by Dr. Jones on November 4, 2009
in Children and Power, General Parenting, Sibling Rivalry, Tweens and Teens, siblings
Enlisting the help of older siblings in caring for younger siblings can be extraordinarily good for everyone *if* those relationships are managed well by parents. And that is true for managing sibling relationships in general. Too many parents let siblings “work it out” only to engender victim/predator behaviors and roles that carry forward into adult life.
The harm of having older children look after younger is in doing so haphazardly, without a system or plan to ensure that the burden doesn’t become too great or compromise the needs and ambitions of the older child. Any action by a parent that fosters resentment or rebellion in a child is misguided. Children may not always behave well, but they behave honestly. If you are getting pushback from an older sibling who has been asked to take over some of your parenting duties, it is time to reevaluate your expectations and put more balance, planning and communication into the dynamic
Naturally, needs are different based on the number of siblings involved and their age separation. But generally speaking, older children are more than willing to assume some parental duties while they are still in the age zone that supports modeling behavior…ages 5-8. Even a child as young as 5 can provide some support to her parents if invited to help and coached in the skills needed.
But after 8, a child’s needs and perspective change in key ways, making him more inclined to seek relationships with peers and to look for ways to build a personal unique identity. It is during the tweens that many older children grow to resent having parental responsibilities, since these often hamper their efforts to socialize and explore new relationships. And because their younger siblings are so responsive to the model of the older siblings, parents tend to be more critical of older siblings during that sensitive tween/teen phase of trial and error with appearance, ways of speaking, and other forms of self-expression.
With a little structure, parents of multiple children can avoid the common pitfalls of relying on older siblings for help. Great strategies for building more structure in this experience include:
Anticipate that between the ages of 8 and 10, your older sibling will want more freedom, opportunity and support in his exploration of self and society. Offer ever expanding access to these opportunities with each new level of parenting responsibility the child assumes. This ‘tit for tat’ approach rewards him for contributing by satisfying his most pressing developmental need.
As your younger children grow, offer them opportunities to support their older siblings in key ways. The benefits of being in a large family and assuming some parenting responsibilities should be that seniority has privileges. One of these privileges should be that younger siblings assume more tasky, onerous jobs like household chores. As children move up through the ranks AND show responsibility and devotion to the family, they pass the less enjoyable work on to the younger.
All children respect the seniority pyramid. It is a natural organizer for both large families and classrooms of children.
The key to using a seniority cycle for a large group of siblings is that there must be equal opportunity and equal responsibility. All children should have opportunities to lead, and all children should have duties to fulfill on behalf of and in contribution to the family or household at large.
Parents of many children would benefit from taking the time to build a “staircase” of responsibilities and privileges that each child passes through by demonstrating competency step-by-step. This is similar to the systems of achievement used by Boy and Girl Scouts.
If older children see that seniority has privileges – not only in terms of more freedom and choice, but in terms of having younger children provide support and assume less desirable duties – they will gladly embrace a system in which they are held accountable as proxy parents.
Large families can barely survive intact without some form of regular family meeting or mode of communication. Weekly or bi-weekly meetings (preferably over pizza or something fun, and with a fun activity to look forward to…like movie night) should involve everyone and should be run much the way they would be in a large corporation. Everyone, even down to the Kindergartner – should be encouraged to submit items for a family meeting agenda and to come prepared to discuss their concerns. Rotational leadership incites everyone to prepare and behave respectfully, and keeping things short, focused and impactful plants seeds for positive feelings about meetings in the future. Each member of the family can have rotational roles, such as peacekeeper, timekeeper, or – my favorite – “Love Captain” (whose job is to make sure everyone in the meeting feels loved and appreciated).
Downside
Both older and younger children can suffer in a large family if everything is left to chance and whimsical decisionmaking. Younger children can develop deep-seated feelings of insecurity and fear of abandonment, if they sense that their older siblings are in charge but distracted and unconcerned. Small children grow into children with poor self-esteem if they do not always feel that they are protected and loved. So putting older siblings in charge without ensuring a strict level of care and watchfulness can turn out badly in the long-run.
Older children lack the ability to manage their emotions and reactions to misbehavior, and are much more likely to lose control and act out against a screaming baby or toddler. Busy parents of big families are not likely to notice if an older sibling lashes out against a toddler in the throes of a tantrum. This dynamic is quite dangerous long-term. Older children can learn behaviors that they will carry forward in other nurture-based relationships. Younger children can grow resentful toward the parents out of a sense of abandonment and vulnerability. Also, younger children who feel unprotected and potentially endangered by the neglectful care of an older sibling are likely to assert themselves and become bullyish and physically confrontational with other children at school.
What to Do if Your Child is a Bully
by Dr. Jones on August 21, 2009
in Bullies, Children 101, Children and Power, Dangerous Behavior, Divorce-Related Issues, General Parenting, Hitting or Biting, School-related Issues, Sibling Rivalry, Verbal Aggression
These tips are useful with any child, but especially with children who are showing signs of bullying other children:
Communicate
Set up a day each week where you spend 5-15 minutes talking with your child about upcoming events, large and small.
Invite your child (if he is 5 or older) to come up with his own items for your “meeting”. The focus is on anything new that might be happening or changes that might take place.
It isn’t necessary to go into great depth. You want to better understand how your child feels about those changes, and your job is to offer as much information as you *have* about those changes. With the promise of a weekly chat, your child will eventually begin to calm and grow more comfortable with the change.
RESULTS: 3-6 weeks of consistent effort
Set Sibling Rules
Establish family rules and results for sibling relationships. No sibling should have the power to infringe on the rights or space of another, ever, for any reason.
It is critical that you protect each of your children from the others, because they are biologically motivated to battle for your favor. It is completely up to you to create a healthy, collaborative environment.
Establish a hierarcy of privilege based on seniority (a natural hierarchy that all children respect). Decide who can do what and when. Make clear your rules about invading another sibling’s space and what is lost when that rule is violated (or what is gained when it is respected).
RESULTS: 3-6 weeks
Schedule ”Me Time”
Give each sibling “me time” with you at least 5 minutes each week, alone, with your undivided attention. Stick to it, no matter what.
RESULTS: 2-3 weeks
Role Play
Role play with your child all the scenarios surrounding bully experiences, both on the giving and receiving ends. Use books, movies and your own invented scenarios to prompt short role plays with your child. Involve stuffed animals, friends and siblings, Barbies, or whatever serves best as characters in your play.
Invite your child to assume both the role of bully and of the bullied and to switch back and forth. Take turns testing new language to dispel a bully situation and the feelings that motivate it.
RESULTS: 2-3 role plays
Meet the Parents
If you believe your child may be bullying other children, make a concerted effort to meet with the parents of the victim children. If your child is bullying, he is thriving on any lack of communication that may exist between you and the victim’s parents.
Eliminate these barriers and open up lines of communication so that your child is forced to confront the situation openly.
Not only will this escalate the need for solving the problem, but it will model a healthy method of communication for your child.
RESULTS: instant
Empower
Any bullying child is experiencing a sense of powerlessness. You can see immediate results by simply expanding your child’s opportunities to have positive power.
This can be as simple as inviting your child to participate more in daily household activities, such as cooking, cleaning, home repairs, organizing, grocery shopping, etc. Or it can be a matter of helping your child find leadership opportunities in school, in extracurricular activities, or in the community at large.
Increasing your child’s sense of power typically eliminates bully behavior altogether because the child no longer has a need to assert power over others. This is the most effective way to stop bullying.
RESULTS: 1-3 weeks
Next week: How to know if your child is being bullied at school.

