Family Meeting Album
Family Meeting Album
Family Meeting Album
How to Use This Family Meeting Album
Start by pasting a picture of your family on the cover page. Place
the cover (with your family picture) on the cover of a binder that
provides a clear plastic place to insert your picture.
Print out several weekly challenges pages (all pages that are
blank except for headings are at the end of this document, and
can be printed over and over) on three hole punched paper, and
introduce them at your first family meeting. Every week post a
new Family Meeting Agenda page on the refrigerator (or wherever
works for your family) so that family members can write down
the challenges that need to be solved. When finished, save each
page in your family meeting album.
As you read through the rest of “Why Have Family Meetings,” and
the “Family Meeting Agenda,” you will learn about compliments
and other “pages” and activities to spice up your family meetings.
Enjoy!
Why have Family Meetings?
Holding regular Family Meetings is one of the most valuable
things you can do as a family. Why?
1) Listening skills
2) Brainstorming skills
3) Problem-solving skills
4) Mutual respect
7) Cooperation
Steps for Effective Family Meetings
1) Family meetings should be held once a week. After a time has
been decided upon for family meetings, nothing should
interfere. If friends call, tell them you will call back later. Do
not skip a family meeting because you are busy or have
something else to do. Your children will follow your lead in
determining the importance of family meetings. Once the
tradition has been effectively established, everyone will look
forward to this opportunity for family togetherness.
! !
Family Meeting Agenda
1) Compliments
Compliments
Each component of the agenda is important. Start with
compliments for several reasons:
4) Ask for any verbal compliments that were not written down.
Take time to plan a monthly (at least) family event and put it on
the calendar. This could be anything the family likes to do
together. Perhaps a trip to the park, bowling, skating, a hike, a
bike ride—and once in a while a family vacation. So often we plan
to do things as a family but don’t do it because we don’t take the
time to put it on the calendar.
Family Meeting Jobs
Recorder:
Be sure to have someone write down all the ideas that are
brainstormed. It is so much fun to look at these ideas later – as
much fun as looking at old family picture albums.
Chairperson:
Rotate this job so everyone has a chance to be the “person in
charge”. The Chairperson calls the meeting to order, asks for
compliments to begin, and handles the Weekly Challenges page
by announcing the next challenge to be solved and following the
rest of the agenda.
Timekeeper:
A timekeeper can keep everyone on track so the meeting doesn’t
go on and on and get boring.
Gratitude Pages
An attitude of gratitude does not come naturally. It must be
learned. Regular practice and sharing will help all family members
develop an attitude of gratitude.
2) Allow time during family meals for people to share the things
for which they are grateful.
Your family can create closeness and have a great time discussing
family mottos. You might want to choose a different motto every
month and make them more meaningful through the suggested
activities. Several examples are included. You may want to use
some of these and/or create your own.
Sample Mottos:
1) One for all and all for one.
7) We are problem-solvers.
• Week Two: Plan time during the family meeting for each
person to share what they wrote. Place all these sheets in the
binder. Pass out another blank motto sheet and invite
everyone to find some time during the week to draw a picture
that represents what the motto means to them. You might
want to plan a special time when everyone does this together.
• Week Three: Plan time during the family meeting for each
person to share their picture and talk about it. Place the
pictures on the refrigerator, or some other place where
everyone can enjoy them. Ask everyone to notice how they
apply the family motto in action during the following week.
• Week Four: Plan time during the family meeting for each
person to share an example of how they used the family
motto in action. Invite family members to be thinking about
another motto to begin the next month.
• Week One of the Next Month: Put all the drawings of the last
motto in the binder. Choose another motto, and repeat the
process described above.
Family Fun Time Planning
Many families do not spend enough
time together doing fun things. Often,
we have good intentions, but we
don’t take the time to plan and
schedule events on a calendar. It is
also important to plan some “Special
Time” with each child. Special Time
with your younger children can be
just a few minutes a day. Special
Time with your teenagers can be once
a week. Click Here to read more about special time with your
teenager.
3) During family meetings, use your list to let the family choose
something to place on the calendar for your “family event
planning.”
Family Meal Planning Pages
The Family Meal provides an excellent opportunity to teach
cooperation and contribution. Even small children can take a turn
cooking a simple meal such as soup and toasted cheese
sandwiches, a vegetable, lettuce salad and Jello.
3) Use 3x5 cards for recipes. On the back of the recipe, write all
the ingredients needed from the store. (Save these cards in a
special card index box so they can be used over and over.)
Chore Planning
It is very important to
teach children to be
contributing members of
society. This training
begins in the home where
they learn to contribute to
the well being of the family
by helping with the family
work (chores).
Following is an excerpt
from the book Positive Discipline on chores:
At one family meeting, we listed all the chores done by Mom and
Dad (including full-time employment) in an effort to eliminate
“How come I have to do everything?” whenever we asked one of
our children to do something. We then asked them to brainstorm
a list of all the chores that could be done by children. We chimed
in with all the things we could think of that they forgot. Still, their
list wasn’t nearly as long as ours. When they saw the comparison
between what we ask of them and what we do, they were
impressed. We then put the chores they could do on slips of
paper that could be drawn from a jar each week. Each child drew
four chores each week.
There was a new drawing every week so that one child was never
stuck with the same chore, such as the garbage, all the time.
I asked, “Have you found anything else that motivates your kids
to do their chores for a whole week?”
I said, “Sounds like a success to me. I suggest you keep doing it.”
I then told her about our three-week syndrome. Even though we
need to keep working on it, we feel we get much greater
cooperation by handling the problem through family meetings
than any other way we have tried. We achieve great responsibility
for a while. When it starts to slack off, we put it on the agenda.
The kids often come up with a new plan. For awhile they enjoyed
using a chore wheel that they made from a paper plate with
pictures of chores around the edge and a brad in the middle to
fasten a spinner. They would spin for a few chores each week.
Later they each enjoyed making a chore chart with pockets
across the top for “undone” chores, and pockets across the
bottom for “done” chores. They seemed to get a sense of
accomplishment when they could move a chore card to the
“done” row.
They decided that I should put two major chores for each of them
on the white board near our phone. During the negotiation time, I
wanted a rule that they should do these chores right after school.
They wanted the freedom to choose the time of completion so
long as the chores were done before they went to bed. I asked,
“What happens if you don’t do them before you go to bed?” They
agreed that it would be a reasonable consequence for me to circle
their name on the white board and then they would have to do all
four chores the next day right after school. For six months this
worked very well. Once in a while I would have to circle a name,
and they would then do all four chores the next day right after
school.
The first week they set their alarms to try beating each other to
choose what they thought to be the easiest chores. However, that
didn’t last long. Soon they decided sleep was more important
than easier chores, so the one who got to the board last accepted
his or her fate with grace.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Problem or Challenge______________________
(Each one has its own special page)
Brainstorm ideas
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
10)
Solution Chosen:
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
Family Meeting Motto Page
Fun Things to Do
Together as a Family
Special Time
For Parents
Family Meal Planning
This is a simple meal planning chart. You can create your own or there are some downloadable
forms online. Here is one of our favorites. Click Here
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Cook:
Main Dish:
Vegetable:
Salad:
Dessert:
Mistakes and What I learned from Them
Tips for Successful Family Meetings
1) Decide on an amount of time that sounds reasonable for
everyone, and stick to the time. You can always renegotiate
the amount of time as one of the challenges that can be put
on the family meeting agenda.
8) Enjoy!
Click Here
to read more about Family Meetings
and listen to a podcast.