What is a Family Assembly and Why Does it Work with Teenagers?
Do you feel like your home is a battlefield? Adolescence is a time of searching for identity and autonomy, which often results in rebellion, power struggles, and lack of communication. Punishments and yelling no longer work.
A Family Assembly is a positive discipline tool that transforms this environment. It is not a court, but a democratic and structured space where all family members have a voice and vote to solve problems, plan activities, and make decisions that affect the group. By giving them a place of respect, the troubled teen feels heard and becomes part of the solution, not just the “problem.”
Benefits of the Family Assembly for Coexistence
- Promotes Responsibility: The teen becomes more committed to the rules they helped create.
- Improves Communication: This is the ideal time to practice active listening and respectful expression.
- Reduces Conflict: It allows you to establish limits and consequences proactively, not reactively.
- Develops Social Skills: They practice negotiation, consensus, and problem-solving.
Step-by-Step Guide to Implementing The Family Meeting
The key to success lies in consistency and structure. Follow these steps to get started:
1. Establish a Fixed Place, Day, and Time
The meeting should be regular and fixed (e.g., every Sunday at 6 p.m.). Choose a neutral location (the dining room table) and make sure everyone knows it’s a priority commitment. Predictability breeds security.
2. Create a Weekly Agenda
Use a whiteboard or notebook where, throughout the week, any member can add points for discussion. This prevents conflicts from erupting in the moment and ensures that time is used efficiently. Topics should be neutral and solution-focused (e.g., “Weekend Arrival Time,” “Organizing Chores,” “Leisure Budget”).
Top 5 Behavior Rankings - Last Week
| Position | Name | Score | Evaluations | Favorites |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Luarna | 8.71 | 14 | |
| 2 | C-111 | 8.2 | 15 | |
| 3 | Sergio | 7.87 | 15 | |
| 4 | Adrián | 7.69 | 13 | |
| 5 | Elena | 7.64 | 14 | |
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It is recommended that three key sections be included in the Family Assembly: requests, complaints, and thanks.
3. Define Rotating Roles and Ground Rules
Roles (Leader/Moderator, Secretary/Note-Taker) should rotate so that everyone, including the teen, takes responsibility for the process. Establish golden rules:
- Do not interrupt (use a “word object”).
- Speak with respect (without blaming or judging).
- Focus on solutions, not errors.
4. Meeting Structure (30-60 minutes)
- Praise and Recognition (Positive Start): Each person says something positive about the other (e.g., “Thank you for helping me with dinner”).
- Agenda Discussion: Address points one by one, seeking consensus on solutions. The rules should be group decisions.
- Weekly Planning: Sync schedules, events, and home organization.
- Fun Closing: End with something that strengthens the bond (a game, dessert, planning an outing).
Tips for Success with Difficult Teens
Initial resistance is normal. Here are three strategies to overcome it:
- Emotional Validation: Before seeking a solution to their misbehavior, validate their feelings. “I understand that you’re frustrated about not being able to use your phone anymore, but let’s talk about how we can negotiate a new schedule.”
- The Power of “We”: If the issue is the mess at home, frame it as “a family problem,” not “your child’s problem.” This makes them feel like an ally.
- Be Firm, but Kind: Maintain the limits set by the group, but maintain a supportive, never confrontational, attitude. Remember that it is a space to grow together.
Bibliography and Main Resources
- Connected Families. (s.f.). Families With Teenagers, Keep Calm and Stay Connected. Retrieved from https://connectedfamilies.org/keep-calm-stay-connected-teen/
- National Health Service (NHS). (s.f.). Worried about your teenager? Retrieved from https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/children-and-young-adults/advice-for-parents/worried-about-your-teenager/
- Parent Project. (s.f.). Help for parents raising difficult children. Recovered from https://parentproject.com/
- The Big Life Journal. (s.f.). 4 Steps to a Successful Family Meeting. Retrieved from https://biglifejournal.com/blogs/blog/steps-successful-family-meeting