6-Year-Old Parenting Tools

By: Center for Health and Safety Culture
  • Summary

  • Your healthy relationship with your six-year-old is essential to their development. Through relationships, your child develops a sense of belonging. They come to better understand themselves through their interactions with you, their teachers, and their peers. Now is the right time for parents and those in a parenting role to continue to grow a positive relationship with their child. Parenting is so important and each day presents new excitement and challenges. The tools offered in this podcast from ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org will give you the chance to do simple things right now to support your six-year-old to be confident, communicate well, and have respect. The Montana Department of Health and Human Services partnered with the Center for Health and Safety Culture at Montana State University to create ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org, which promotes healthy mental, emotional, and behavioral development. ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org was initially developed for parents and those in a parenting role in Montana to build the skills their children need to strengthen communication, build relationships, and develop social and emotional skills. However, these parenting tools and tips are relevant for parents everywhere trying to do what is best for their child. Listening to this podcast that shares tools from ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org will teach you a five-step process: Gain Input, Teach, Practice, Support, and Recognize. Using this process in daily interactions with your child builds a strong relationship while addressing specific parenting matters. The same process that you use with a young child can be used with an older child. Parenting evolves as children mature and having a process to guide you is incredibly helpful. Taking time to invest in your parenting skills now will benefit your child for a lifetime as you meet them each day with confidence, empathy and love. The specific tools available through this podcast for supporting your six-year-old include: Anger, Back Talk, Bullying, Chores, Confidence, Conflict, Discipline, Friends, Homework, Listening, Lying, Tantrums, Mixed Messages about Alcohol, Reading, Routines, Sharing, and Stress. Listen now to grow your ability to support your six-year-old today!
    Copyright 2024 Center for Health and Safety Culture
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Episodes
  • Lying for Your 6-Year-Old
    Sep 24 2024

    Trust is foundational for healthy relationships. As a parent or someone in a parenting role, you play an important role in your six-year-old’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-child relationship and learn how to promote trust in your child.

    Lying represents an important milestone in your child’s thinking as they learn that others have different beliefs and perspectives than their own. Experimenting with lying is a typical part of a child’s development. Experimenting with lying is how they come to understand their perspective versus others’ and also how they test boundaries. Children ages five to ten are learning about the rules of school and family life. For your child to understand rules, they need to test them and sometimes break them.

    The key to many parenting challenges, like raising children who grow in their understanding of the value of truth-telling, is finding ways to communicate so that both your and your child’s needs are met. The steps below will prepare you to help your child learn more about your family values, how they relate to lying, and how you can grow and deepen your trusting relationship.

    Why Lying?

    Whether your five-year-old lies about eating their dinner when you can clearly see they have been stashing peas in their napkin, your seven-year-old telling their teacher they did their homework but left it at home when they didn’t, or your ten-year-old telling a friend they dance ballet when they’ve never tried it, your child’s ability to tell the truth can become a regular challenge if you don’t create plans and strategies.

    Today, in the short term, honesty can create

    ● greater opportunities for connection and enjoyment

    ● trust in each other

    ● a sense of well-being for a parent and child

    ● added daily peace of mind

    Tomorrow, in the long term, your child

    ● builds skills in self-awareness

    ● builds skills in social awareness, perspective-taking, empathy, and compassion

    ● builds skills in self-control

    ● develops moral and consequential thinking and decision-making

    Five Steps for Teaching Your Child About Honesty

    This five-step process helps you teach your child honesty and builds important skills. The same process can also be used to address other parenting issues (learn more about the process[1] ).

    Tip: These steps are best when you and your child are not tired or in a rush.
    Tip: Intentional communication[2] and a healthy parenting relationship[3] support these steps.
    Step 1. Get Your Child Thinking by Getting Their Input

    You can get your child thinking about honesty by asking them open-ended questions. You’ll help prompt your child’s thinking. You’ll also better understand their thoughts, feelings, and challenges related to honesty so that you can address them. In gaining input, your child

    ● has the opportunity to become more aware of how they are thinking and feeling related to lies and truth

    ● can begin to formulate what it means to be in a trusting relationship

    ● can think through and problem-solve any temptations to lie they may encounter ahead of time

    ● has a greater stake in anything they’ve designed themself (and with that sense of...

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    24 mins
  • Homework for Your 6-Year-Old
    Sep 24 2024

    As parents or those in a parenting role, you play an important role in your child’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-child relationship, and helping your six-year-old learn to deal with tantrums constructively provides a perfect opportunity.

    Children ages five to ten are in the process of learning about their strong feelings. They do not understand the full-body takeover that can occur when angry, hurt, or frustrated. A sense of a lack of control can be scary and add to the length and intensity of their upset.

    Tantrums and meltdowns can be overwhelming for children and the adults in their lives. Learning how to deal with anger or upset without choosing destructive responses is critical. Understanding the difference between a tantrum and a meltdown will help parents and those in a parenting role properly guide their children through these intense times. Your support and guidance matter greatly.

    Even though they may look like the same behaviors, tantrums and meltdowns are different and require different approaches to handle each.

    Tantrums are

    ● a typical reaction or outburst to feeling anger or frustration

    ● a cry for attention or an inability to communicate

    ● within a child’s scope of awareness and control

    ● goal-oriented

    A child throwing a tantrum is experiencing intense feelings and acting out in hopes of a desired outcome. Sensory meltdowns, like tantrums, are characterized by a child experiencing big feelings, but the difference is that the child is not acting out in search of a desired outcome.

    Meltdowns are

    ● most common among children with sensory processing disorders, autism, or other medical issues who are easily overstimulated or cannot cope with emotional triggers such as fear or anxiety

    ● an instinctive survival reaction to being overstimulated or feeling distressed

    ● not goal-oriented, meaning they are not affected by a reward system

    ● long-lasting

    ● children may never grow out of them like they do tantrums

    To a parent or someone in a parenting role, tantrums and meltdowns may seem like mischievous behaviors that the child needs to curb immediately. However, it is critical to remember that these outbursts are a child’s attempt to communicate something about their intense feelings. Parents and those in a parenting role can help guide their children through these feelings and teach them skills to manage them.

    Parents’ recognition and understanding of tantrums and meltdowns are essential for teaching children how to recognize and handle their big feelings.


    This tool is most applicable to parents handling children with tantrums. While many of the strategies for tantrums help children experiencing meltdowns, it is essential to note that meltdowns require immense patience, calm, and presence of mind to keep children safe. There are many helpful resources for parents of children with sensory processing challenges. A few resources about sensory meltdowns include:

    ● The Autism Speaks website has multiple articles and information on meltdowns. A simple search of “meltdowns” in the search bar brings up numerous options. https://www.autismspeaks.org/

    ● National Autistic Society, an organization in the United Kingdom, has a website that also provides multiple articles on meltdowns and dealing with anger and anxiety when “meltdowns” are...

    Show more Show less
    25 mins
  • Following Directions for Your 6-Year-Old
    Sep 24 2024

    As parents or those in a parenting role, you play an important role in your child’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-child relationship, and helping your six-year-old learn to deal with tantrums constructively provides a perfect opportunity.

    Children ages five to ten are in the process of learning about their strong feelings. They do not understand the full-body takeover that can occur when angry, hurt, or frustrated. A sense of a lack of control can be scary and add to the length and intensity of their upset.

    Tantrums and meltdowns can be overwhelming for children and the adults in their lives. Learning how to deal with anger or upset without choosing destructive responses is critical. Understanding the difference between a tantrum and a meltdown will help parents and those in a parenting role properly guide their children through these intense times. Your support and guidance matter greatly.

    Even though they may look like the same behaviors, tantrums and meltdowns are different and require different approaches to handle each.

    Tantrums are

    ● a typical reaction or outburst to feeling anger or frustration

    ● a cry for attention or an inability to communicate

    ● within a child’s scope of awareness and control

    ● goal-oriented

    A child throwing a tantrum is experiencing intense feelings and acting out in hopes of a desired outcome. Sensory meltdowns, like tantrums, are characterized by a child experiencing big feelings, but the difference is that the child is not acting out in search of a desired outcome.

    Meltdowns are

    ● most common among children with sensory processing disorders, autism, or other medical issues who are easily overstimulated or cannot cope with emotional triggers such as fear or anxiety

    ● an instinctive survival reaction to being overstimulated or feeling distressed

    ● not goal-oriented, meaning they are not affected by a reward system

    ● long-lasting

    ● children may never grow out of them like they do tantrums

    To a parent or someone in a parenting role, tantrums and meltdowns may seem like mischievous behaviors that the child needs to curb immediately. However, it is critical to remember that these outbursts are a child’s attempt to communicate something about their intense feelings. Parents and those in a parenting role can help guide their children through these feelings and teach them skills to manage them.

    Parents’ recognition and understanding of tantrums and meltdowns are essential for teaching children how to recognize and handle their big feelings.


    This tool is most applicable to parents handling children with tantrums. While many of the strategies for tantrums help children experiencing meltdowns, it is essential to note that meltdowns require immense patience, calm, and presence of mind to keep children safe. There are many helpful resources for parents of children with sensory processing challenges. A few resources about sensory meltdowns include:

    ● The Autism Speaks website has multiple articles and information on meltdowns. A simple search of “meltdowns” in the search bar brings up numerous options. https://www.autismspeaks.org/

    ● National Autistic Society, an organization in the United Kingdom, has a website that also provides multiple articles on meltdowns and dealing with anger and anxiety when “meltdowns” are...

    Show more Show less
    25 mins

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