Article

Goal Setting for Kids – 1 Parenting Tip and 1 Strategy That Help Kids Accomplish Their Goals

Topic: ParentingBy Jea Tracy, MSSPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,005 legacy views

Legacy rating: 3/5 from 3 archived votes

Goal setting with pictures fit together like laughter and fun. Both end with feelings of joy and contentment. Yet many grown-ups don’t experience this. They fail to turn their dreams into goals. Don’t let this become your child’s fate. Childhood is the best time to teach your child the tools for setting goals.

“Setting goals is the first step in turning the invisible into the visible.” - Anthony Robbins

The Parenting Tip – How to Picture the Goal:

To make him goal visible, teach your child to mentally picture what he sees as he looks outward from himself. Tell him to do this mental picturing as if he is accomplishing his goal right now. This is different from picturing himself inside his goal. Let’s examine this parenting tip further.

The Parenting Strategy – An Example for Picturing the Goal:

If your Kevin wants to learn how to dive, pretend you are sharing this conversation:

"Kevin, what would you see before you dive off the diving board?"
"I'd see the water."

"What if you tucked your head in toward your body?"

"I'd see the water and my feet on the edge of the diving board."

"Picture the water and picture your feet on the edge of the diving board right now."

"OK."

"As you push off and your body is heading into the water, what do you see?"

"My eyes are closed. I don't see anything."

"Kevin, before you fall asleep at night, picture the water and your feet on the tip of the diving board. Feel your head tucking in and your feet pushing off the diving board. Once off the board you don't have to see anything. Just experience the great feeling of a good dive. Try picturing it now."

If Kevin is having trouble picturing the dive, keep asking questions to help Kevin picture it clearly.

Goal Setting with Pictures - The Conclusion:

Some kids might give answers different from Kevin’s. Their answers may be just as good. After all, in order for this parenting strategy to work, it must be your child’s picture. Your task is to make sure your child is not picturing himself from a distance, like from the other end of the pool or on the sidelines. Make sure he sees outward from his eyes while making the dive.

Goal setting with pictures can change dreams into reality. Why not teach your child the tools for turning the invisible into the visible? If you do, your child will experience how goal setting and pictures fit together like fun and laughter. You’ll both enjoy the contentment of a job well done and you’ll be building character too.

Article author

About the Author

To find more examples on picturing goals, visit Free Feature Articles at http://www.kidsdiscuss.com n Jean Tracy, MSS, publishes a FREE PARENTING NEWSLETTER. Subscribe at http://www.kidsdiscuss.com and receive 80 fun activities to share with your kids.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Are you tired of disrespectful talk from your kids? Do your children respond with eye-rolling and sarcasm to everything you say? Most—if not all—kids go through phases when they are sassy, mouthy, or disrespectful. As a parent, it’s hard to know when to let it slide—and when to address the problem. James Lehman explains where to draw the line—and tells you how you can manage sassy talk in your home.

Related piece

Article

Remember how you felt when you brought your baby home from the hospital for the first time? When your child was an infant, you probably acknowledged that you were anxious and unsure of what you were doing at times—most new parents are. In my experience, those kinds of feelings continue as we raise our kids—we just stop expressing them to others.

Related piece

Article

When you are at peace with having a baby or not having a baby, then what will be, will be. You will either have one (as you were supposed to) or you will not have one (as it was not meant to be). Accept the fact that God has a plan for your life, which may not include children. If you don’t ...

Related piece

Article

One of the most challenging aspects of being a mom is managing the expectations of yourself and others. Motherhood is a world of compromise, flexibility and negotiations. It’s a balancing act between doing what you want to do and doing what you have to do.

Related piece