Spend quality one-on-one time with your child

Fifteen minutes of child-led, uninterrupted attention per day builds the relationship that discipline depends on.

Why it works

A strong parent-child relationship functions as a protective factor and as the currency that makes praise, limits, and teaching credible. When a child experiences reliable, uninterrupted attention, their attachment security increases and their demand for attention through misbehavior decreases. The mechanism is reinforcement of prosocial attachment behavior: the child learns that appropriate behavior reliably produces what they need.

How to do it

  1. Set aside a predictable daily slot of ten to fifteen minutes — same time, same signal so the child knows it’s coming.
  2. Let the child lead the activity. Follow, don’t direct.
  3. Put away the phone and close the laptop. Partial attention sends a less clear signal than brief full attention.
  4. Describe what the child is doing ("You’re building a really tall tower") rather than directing or questioning.

Evidence

Triple P’s quality-time component is embedded in a program with strong meta-analytic support. Separately, child-directed interaction as a component of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) has RCT evidence for improving both relationship quality and child behavior. (rct)

PCIT RCT evidence covers a clinical population; translation to the universal Triple P level with typical children is supported by program-level evaluations rather than isolated component tests.

Sources

  • Eyberg, S. M. et al. (2001). Child Directed Interaction in PCIT. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 30(2), 226–240.
  • Sanders, M. R. et al. (2014). The Triple P — Positive Parenting Program as a public health approach. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 10, 1–35.

Common mistake

Turning the quality-time session into teaching, correcting, or skill-building time, which places the adult back in the director role and removes the distinct signal that this time is purely for the child.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you plan and protect a daily quality-time slot, suggests child-led activities, and tracks consistency over time so the habit solidifies.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).