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Curfews

All children – yes, even tweens and teenagers – need the routine and structure that firm family rules provide in order to develop confidence in navigating their environment. Curfews are one of those rules and are an important part of developing a teenager’s (and tween’s) responsibility.

Benefits of Establishing a Curfew

How to Set Up a Curfew

Parents should set an official curfew – a set time around which your teen will have to schedule their activities. Generally, this curfew doesn’t change and helps your teen understand limits and boundaries. It does not have to be the same time on weeknights as on weekends, but it does remain consistent from weekday to weekday and weekend to weekend. You can always add or restrict this time when they have something special to do or you need them to be home earlier. For example, if your 16-year-old’s curfew is midnight on the weekends, you may want to extend that time on prom night.

When setting a curfew, parents should be willing to compromise with their teen when determining the curfew time and then stay firm once that curfew has been agreed to by the family. It’s important to get your teen’s input into curfews for two main reasons: (1) it increases their likelihood to comply, and (2) it may offer you ideas that you had not considered when choosing a time. They may have an excellent reason for needing an extra half hour on the weekend, which should be taken into account, and again will increase your teen’s likelihood of meeting your rules. Parents should explain their reasoning in choosing a time. They should discuss how curfews increase a child’s safety and that is the parents’ number one concern. Parents should also talk to their teen about what it means to have this responsibility. Explain the trust you are placing in them to be home on time.

Here are a few more tips:

Negotiating Curfews

Nearly every parent finds themselves negotiating around the issue of their child’s curfew. When your child pushes you to extend the time by another half hour or hour, you can quickly find yourself in a pointless argument or backing down to avoid one. James Lehman, who writes for “Empowering Parents” – a weekly newsletter – recommends following these specific rules when your child wants to negotiate about curfew:

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