A → B → C
What sets the stage
Everything that comes before the behavior — the tiredness, the hunger, the sudden transition, the way a request is phrased. Most "out of nowhere" moments have a setup you can see once you look. Adjust the setup (a snack, a warning, a calmer ask) and you prevent many moments before they start.
The one you name
The specific thing your child does. The trick is to define the positive opposite — the behavior you want instead of the one you don't. Not "stop whining," but "ask in a calm voice." Naming what to do gives everyone a clear target to aim at and to praise.
What makes it repeat
What follows a behavior shapes whether it happens again. Warm, specific praise — naming exactly what your child did — plus a small, planned reward for practicing the behavior makes it far more likely to return. Reinforcing the try, early and often, is how a new habit takes root.
You build behavior, you don't punish it into being
The instinct is to attack B — to stop the behavior in the moment with a louder voice or a consequence. But the moment is the hardest, least changeable part. Decades of behavioral research point to the opposite move: leave B alone and work A and C. Set the stage so the good behavior is easier, and reward it warmly when it appears. You can't punish a child into a new skill — but you can help them practice it until it's simply who they are.
The difference is timing. A reward planned in advance for practicing the behavior you want is reinforcement. A treat handed over in the heat of the moment to make a behavior stop is bribery — it teaches that kicking off gets results. Same coin, opposite lesson.
There's a deeper reason not to reach for a coin during a bad moment: it tends to reward the storm. A coin that ends a tantrum can teach a child that melting down is what works — so the meltdown grows a little stronger, not weaker. And it quietly catches you, too: because giving in makes the storm stop, you get nudged toward giving in again next time. Behavioral scientists call this the reinforcement trap (or coercive cycle).
In the moment, stay steady and let it pass — don't bargain. Once everyone's settled, look at what set it off (A) and how to reinforce the calmer response next time (C), talk it through together, then let a coin kick-start the new habit — planned, and at a calm moment. That's why Habit Badger works at A and C, and is never a mid-moment (B) tool.
The evidence
This approach is the backbone of Parent Management Training, one of the most studied approaches to children's behavior. A 2022 meta-analysis of 25 randomized trials found a meaningful reduction in disruptive behavior — with even larger gains in positive parenting skills. It's a way of building everyday habits, not a substitute for professional care; if you're worried about your child, talk with your pediatrician.