Definitely. Every situation will be different. My main point is to simply not allow "I don't know" to be a sufficient answer. Parent still needs to be the parent and work on it with their child.
So how does that work, how do you challenge them? You'll just say "yes, you do" and the child either answers with "nuh-uh" or... What exactly? Elaborate on the conversation a little bit, it feels like an incomplete idea as it is.
Definitely. Every situation will be different. My main point is to simply not allow "I don't know" to be a sufficient answer. Parent still needs to be the parent and work on it with their child.
So how does that work, how do you challenge them? You'll just say "yes, you do" and the child either answers with "nuh-uh" or... What exactly? Elaborate on the conversation a little bit, it feels like an incomplete idea as it is.