Baby Angels Blog

August 14, 2007

Should younger children say “sorry” after doing something wrong?

Great stuff, thought i’d share it.

My friend and fellow Dad blogger Jim Turner (aka Genuine) and I had an interesting discussion this evening over a rather extraordinarily long and delicious dinner away from the wee ones where we talked about whether children should be required to apologize if they break the rules or hurt someone. It sprang out of a relatively minor incident at Jim’s house, but we see something transpire every day with our three that might warrant an apology or two.

This isn’t as obvious as it may appear on first glance, and Linda and I have discussed this very matter more than once in the recent past too.

Obviously, you want to teach your children to be kind, polite and mind their manners, if nothing else than just to be able to survive having them in your house for so many, many years, so from that angle, yes, they need to be taught pleasant behavior like “don’t throw the broccoli at the dog during dinner!” (no further explanation needed, I bet)

But other than training them in some sort of Pavlovian way to monotonically say “yeah, whatever, I’m sorry” or similar, does it really matter if they say “sorry” or not?

Clearly insisting they “say it like you mean it!” is more of the same knee-jerk response to the situation and again, do you really care if someone’s hurt you and they say, but cleary don’t mean, an apology? Does it make your broken lamp get fixed? Your skinned elbow heal?

Having said that, it may surprise you that I believe children should apologize and Jim captured my reasoning well when he observed that it’s just politeness training. Linda, however, believes that it’s quite possible that some children are just too young and since you won’t get a genuine apology, you should just let it go if they don’t automatically say “woah, sorry!”

I’m kind of on a fence about this (but don’t tell my wife) because I have seem my children do something bad and immediately apologize with a heartfelt upset about the situation. Not always, but let’s be frank: do you always mean it when you apologize for things like accidentally bumping someone getting onto the subway?

So what do you do? Do you require 100% compliance with the “say you’re sorry” rule, do you let it go completely, or do you rather sporadically request an apology from the offending party with the perhaps naive belief that somehow they’ll learn to be nicer and more polite and pleasant in the future?

May 24, 2007

Tips for peaceful playdates

Filed under: Toddlers - Friend or Foe, Playtime — Heidi @ 5:08 am

Playdates are a great way to help your child build social skills and strengthen friendships with other children. Try our playdate pointers to help ensure the visit is a success.

The Basics

• Keep the playdate short and sweet: a visit of 1-2 hours is ideal.
• Take your child’s personality into account when deciding on a playmate. A shy
   child may do better with a quieter friend, while an active, exuberant child may
   click best with a more energetic playmate.
• Also, keep your child’s schedule in mind when setting up the playdate. Skipping
   a nap in order to play may lead to a cranky child.

For the Host

• Negotiate ahead of time whether the other parent will stay or drop off her child.
   Younger kids and first-time visitors may take a while to warm up or may feel
   more comfortable with a parent on hand.
• It helps to have a few activities planned, especially for younger children.
   Whether it’s board games, dress-up or cookie decorating, have a few projects
   or toys out and help the kids pick what they’d like to do. See our playdate
   projects
for ideas.
• Be close by to intervene if needed, but try to let the kids work things out them-
   selves first.
• Don’t forget the snacks!

For the Guest

• Find out ahead of time whether the host parent expects you to stay or not. If
   you’ll be dropping your child off, make sure your child feels comfortable before
   you leave.
• If this is your child’s first visit, take a few minutes to familiarize yourself with the
   house and find out what your child will be doing during the playdate.
• Let the other parent know if your child has any food allergies or other issues
   that may be relevant.
• Check in with the host parent afterwards to find out how the playdate went
   and what the kids did.
• Offer to host the next playdate at your house!

April 27, 2007

Love Hate Relationships

Filed under: Toddlers - Friend or Foe — Fiona @ 2:49 pm

All toddlers fight with other toddlers. Most Mums worry about how their little angel is perceived by other mums. Everybody likes to be liked and mums want their toddler to be liked. How often do you hear yourself say ‘I’m sooo sorry, he’s normally so good, it’s sooo not like him’ as your toddler belts a new playmate round the head with a metal toy train! the other mum always seems to look so smug at your apology…that in some way their child is perfect. You end up wanting to belt the mum with something. Mums live in fear of their child being the one other mums groan about when you arrive at soft play! Does this sound familiar? What’s your story? Have you ever ended up in a fight with the mother as well?

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