The Think Space

The Think Space is a plan to help children take responsibility for their own behavioral choices while offering adults a safe and responsible way to remove themselves from the emotional loop of misbehavior.

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QuikTips Bundles

QuikTips is a series of short, practical articles that feature easy-to-use tools for low-stress child management.

Bundled in small packets, and arranged by topic for easy reference.

Learn more....

Everything you say to a child either builds him up or tears him down.
There is no middle ground.

- Carolyn Richert

What are QuikTips?

QuikTips is a series of short, practical articles, written by Calvin and Carolyn Richert, that feature easy-to-use tools for low-stress child management.

All techniques presented meet strict scientific and ethical guidelines and have been carefully "road-tested" for effectiveness in everyday use. Every method is thoroughly positive and, when used as intended, can help children develop skills of self-management, confidence, empathy and the many other positive character qualities needed in becoming well-adjusted, productive adults.

Also available for purchase: QuikTips Bundles are pre-printed small packets, arranged by topic for easy reference.

"Billy, take out the trash right now, or else!"

Do it, or else!

As silly as that demand sounds, it is no less silly than many of the other ways we adults seek to motivate our young. As we call, coax, threaten and throw complaints at our kids, we are doing serious damage to the very respect we want our kids to use with us.

So, how DO you motivate children to get the job done and still retain that fragile relationship we call "respect?"

In our seminars, we teach dozens of motivational tools, but here are a few examples:

  • The 3-Question Quiz - "What did I say?", "What does that mean?" and "What are you going to do?" This series of questions - and their repeated answers - will help your child to internally process your request. In the end, your child's motivation becomes his own, not just yours.
  • "Yes!" - Instead of saying, "No way!" or, "...not until you clean up your room!" say, "Yes!" with an appropriate condition like, "Sure, as soon as your room is clean." In that way, you have turned a potential contest into a positive motivation without generating or using a negative response.
  • The Perfect Choice - When your child resists your request (or directive), present two choices that both get the job done. For example, when your child is refusing to put his shoes on, ask him, "Would you like for me to help you, or would you like to do it yourself?" In this way, the child makes a valid choice, but ends up doing the primary task without resistance.
Do it, or else!

Do you see how these approaches nurture your child's "respect quotient?" In reality, it's a two-sided growth process. The child respects you for treating him like a real human and for helping him work through his (or her) conflicts.

To sum up this series, here are the areas of respect we have covered:

  • Modeling: Demonstrating respect in the way we talk to and treat other people, especially children.
  • Using Standards: Setting and sticking to the guidelines we ask our children to follow.
  • Responding: How adult responses to life's challenging circumstances teach respect.or disrespect.
  • Motivating: Using tools that motivate children do "the right thing" without the disrespectful use of pain or shame.

 

 

Our MISSION

To train adults in the use of positive guidance tools that encourage the inner growth of children.

Learning to communicate with and motivate children to make decisions with their heads and hearts.

Our LOGO

The Heart represents the inner child, which is our primary focus.

DWD Logo - Heart with Arrow

The Arrow shows the outward flow of a balanced child’s energy & awareness.

Our TAG LINE

"... from the inside out" defines the foundation of true character development.

OUTSIDE-IN is how almost all adults teach children until they learn the skills of DWD.

Our FOCUS

  • To help children balance the ‘all about me’ syndrome of childhood.
  • To raise children to be authentic at their core instead of superficial.
  • To guide children to use respect as their basis of interaction with others.