Dealing with a preteen

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Dealing with a 10-year-old who’s suddenly rude and resisting homework can feel exhausting — especially at that “almost a teenager” stage. At 10, kids are starting to crave independence but still don’t have strong emotional control. That mix often comes out as attitude.

Here’s a practical, calm approach that works better than power struggles:

1. Separate the rudeness from the homework issue

Handle them differently.
• Rudeness = behavior problem
• Homework refusal = responsibility/structure problem

If you mix them, it turns into one big emotional fight.

2. Stay calm (even if she isn’t)

If she says:

“I’m not doing it! Stop bothering me!”

Instead of:

“Don’t talk to me like that!”

Try:

“I’m happy to talk, but not when I’m being spoken to like that. Let’s reset.”

Then disengage briefly.

When parents escalate, kids escalate more. Calm wins long-term.

3. Give controlled choices (this age needs autonomy)

Instead of:

“Go do your homework now.”

Try:

“Do you want to start homework now or in 20 minutes?”

Or:

“Math first or reading first?”

She still does it — but she feels some control.

4. Use clear, predictable consequences (no lectures)

If homework isn’t done:
• No screens
• No playdates
• No favorite activity

Say it neutrally:

“Homework needs to be done before screens. That’s the rule.”

Don’t argue about fairness. Calm repetition works better than debating.

5. Watch for the real reason

At 10, resistance is often:
• Homework feels overwhelming
• She doesn’t understand the material
• She’s tired
• She wants attention
• She’s testing boundaries

Ask gently later (not in the middle of conflict):

“Is the homework hard, boring, or something else?”

You might learn something important.

6. Create structure

Kids this age still need routine.

Example:
• Snack
• 20 min break
• Homework time (same time daily)
• Then free time

When it’s predictable, there’s less arguing.

7. Address rudeness directly — but briefly

Later (when calm), say:

“I won’t allow disrespect. You can be upset. You can be frustrated. But you can’t be rude.”

Keep it short. No 20-minute speeches.

8. Strengthen connection

Sometimes rudeness increases when connection decreases.

Even 10–15 minutes of:
• Just talking
• Going for a short walk
• Doing something she likes

can dramatically reduce attitude.

9. Pick your battles

If she rolls her eyes? Ignore it.
If she insults you? Address it.

Not every attitude needs correction.

⚠️ When to look deeper

If you notice:
• Big mood swings
• Sudden drop in grades
• Anxiety about school
• Social problems

There may be more going on than just “preteen attitude.”

One powerful mindset shift

Instead of asking:

“How do I stop this behavior?”

Ask:

“What skill is she missing right now?”

Often it’s:
• Emotional regulation
• Organization
• Frustration tolerance
• Time management

Those need teaching — not punishing.