A. Discipline shall be constructive in nature and emphasize positive approaches to managing the child's behavior.
- 1. The provider shall establish rules and expectations that encourage and teach desired behaviors and discourage undesired behavior.
- 2. The provider shall explain the house rules and expectations and the behavior management approach to each child who is old enough to understand.
- B. There shall be no physical punishment, rough play or severe disciplinary action administered to the body such as, but not limited to, spanking, striking or hitting with a part of the body or an implement, pinching, pulling or roughly handling a child, shaking a child, forcing a child to assume an uncomfortable position (e.g., standing on one foot, keeping arms raised above or horizontal to the body), restraining to restrict movement through binding or tying, enclosing in a confined space, or using exercise as punishment.
- C. Physical restraint shall not be used on children in care. "Physical restraint" means restraining a child's body movements by means of "physical crisis intervention techniques" or a therapeutic intervention utilizing adult physical contact only, as a short-term, emergency means of managing out-of-control behavior. It is not intended to mean everyday, commonly-accepted parenting practices and interventions such as holding a child to prevent falling or crossing into the path of a moving vehicle, or holding a child's hand to prevent placing it on a hot stove, etc.
D. The provider shall not:
- 1. Make threats;
- 2. Make belittling remarks about any child, the child's family, the child's race, religion, or cultural background;
- 3. Use profanity; or
- 4. Make other statements that are frightening or humiliating to the child.
- E. When separation or time-out is used as a discipline technique, it shall be brief and appropriate to the child's developmental level and circumstances.
F. The child who is separated from others shall be:
- 1. In a safe, lighted, and well-ventilated place;
- 2. Not confined or locked in a room or compartment; and
- 3. Within hearing and vision of the provider or assistant at all times if under the age of 13 or diagnosed with special needs.
- G. Children age 13 and older shall be within hearing or vision of the provider or assistant at all times when separated from others for disciplinary reasons.
- H. Children under the age of 13 or those with special needs shall not be placed in time-out for periods of time exceeding one minute for each year of age.
- I. Time-out shall not be used for children under two years of age.
- J. The provider shall not subject children to cruel, severe, humiliating, or unusual actions.
- K. The provider shall not delegate discipline or permit punishment of a child by another child or by an adult not known to the child.
- L. The provider shall not deny a child contact or visits with his family as a method of discipline.
Statutory Authority
§§ 63.2-217 and 63.2-1734 of the Code of Virginia.
Historical Notes
Derived from Virginia Register Volume 15, Issue 10, eff. March 3, 1999; amended, Virginia Register Volume 21, Issue 6, eff. February 1, 2005; Volume 22, Issue 10, eff. February 22, 2006.