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Giving Children an Allowance: Contrasting Views (page 3)

By Robert Brooks, Ph.D.
Dr. Robert Brooks

Also, many parents have reported that when they have used allowance for reward or punishment purposes, their children become angrier, often retorting, "Keep your money!" One young adolescent told his parents, "You think you can buy me off. Well, you can't." Parents of a "strong-willed, precocious" nine-year-old girl reported that their daughter said she didn't need their money and would withdraw funds from her bank account that had accumulated from birthday and holiday presents. With great exasperation they said to me, "We were ready to keep her from taking money out of the bank, but how far do you go to get a child to be responsible?" In my therapy interventions they learned more effective ways of promoting cooperation and family harmony without using allowance as a carrot or stick.

In contrast to Drabman's position, Meltz reported the views of Stanford University psychologist Dr. Carol Dweck whose stance is in concert with my own. Dweck's name may be familiar to my readers since I refer to her work in three articles I wrote last year about "motivating environments".

Dweck contends, "Too many parents set up a system of allowance and chores and then have no consequences for when the chores don't get done. They end up doing the chore themselves, or they take pity and shell out the allowance anyway. That's permissive, indulgent parenting at its worst, and it creates the highest level of entitlement."

Meltz writes, "The potential for a power struggle is one reason Dweck doesn't like to link chores to allowance. 'Parents who don't end up caving, end up painted into a corner,' she says. The child ends up with all the control. In other situations where allowance is tied to chores, instead of learning the lesson parents hope for, that work leads to reward, children's take-home is that everything has a price. 'It can create a dynamic where they won't do anything unless they are paid for it,' Dweck says."

An alternative approach that Dweck recommends is similar to one that Sam Goldstein and I advance in our book Raising Resilient Children and in our forthcoming book Raising a Self-Disciplined Child. Meltz notes, "Dweck's solution is a no-strings allowance with an expectation that children will do specified chores as their contribution in the family's well-being. If chores don't get done in the anticipated time or fashion, the allowance isn't affected, but some privilege is."

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