In a recent Cyber Safety Cop webinar, The Power of Options: Why Kids Cooperate When They Feel in Control, we focused on one of the most practical, and most overlooked, tools in crisis negotiation: options.
Not options that hand over control to your child. Not permissiveness disguised as parenting. But structured choices that preserve your authority while helping your child feel involved in the process. Clayton Cranford framed the core lesson simply: kids, like adults, cooperate better when they feel they have some control.
Clayton Cranford — former Sergeant, Crisis Negotiator, School Resource Officer, and founder of Cyber Safety Cop — shared how one of the biggest lessons from high-stakes negotiation applies directly to parenting. When parents rely only on commands, kids often feel cornered. But when parents keep the boundary firm and offer a limited choice inside that bounda ...