1. Establish rules and disciplines: Establish clear rules and disciplines to let children know which behaviors are acceptable and which are unacceptable. We should strictly enforce these rules, even for children.
2. Give positive incentives: When children show good behavior, they should be affirmed and rewarded in time, which can enhance their self-confidence and enthusiasm.
3. Listening and understanding: communicate effectively with children, listen to their thoughts and feelings, and understand their needs and troubles. This can establish a good parent-child relationship and reduce children's resistance.
4. Cultivate emotional management ability: teach children how to express their emotions correctly, such as releasing negative emotions through words, paintings and sports. At the same time, we should also teach them how to control their emotions and avoid impulsive behavior.
5. Set an example: As parents or educators, we should set an example and set a good example. Don't lose your temper or use violence in front of children, it will give them a wrong demonstration.
6. Seek professional help: If your child's temper problem is serious and you can't solve it yourself, you can seek the help of a professional psychological counselor or a child psychologist. They can provide more professional guidance and advice.
In short, educating children with bad temper requires the joint efforts of parents and educators to help children gradually improve their temper problems by establishing rules, giving positive incentives, listening and understanding, cultivating their emotional management ability, and setting an example.