Tips to Teach Your
Children Good Manners
“Teach love,
generosity, good manners, and some of that will drift from the classroom to the
home, and who knows, the children will be educating the parents.”
The old saying
that children are like sponges is true; they tend to soak up everything and
every influence around them. Manners need to be taught, shown, and reinforced by parents and other adults who have authority of them.
Children go to school to learn how to read and write and they go to church to learn about religion. Learning manners should be taught in the home, and it is one of the easiest things to teach, even at a very early age, but it is not always done.
While teaching your children manners, consider what is age appropriate, their ability to follow them, and who they'll be around. Older family members will expect something completely different from what their peers will respond to. They also need to learn that some of their friends might have bad manners, and it is not okay to follow them.
Here are some tips to help teach manners to your children:
1. Model manners. If you want your child to have good manners, you
must make sure you do as well. This is definitely not an area in which you can
get them to do as you say and not as you do. First step to having a mannerly child
is being a mannerly parent.
2. Practice at home. It is unrealistic for your child to just pick up
the habit of good manners by telepathy. He or she needs to know what the rules
are. Tell your child, put them in writing, and try including them in fun, playtime
etiquette activities.
3. Give him or her the words. There are 5 polite words and phrases that
should be among the first in every child's primary vocabulary. These should be
used while speaking to babies, toddlers, and children. "Please,"
"thank you," "May I,"Excuse me," and "No thank
you," should be required.
4. Give your youngster positive reinforcement. Children love praise,
especially when it comes from a parent or someone they respect. Very often
parents respond only to their children's undesirable behavior, ignoring their
victories and positive actions. This choice may actually have the reverse
result. Children want attention anyway they can get it, even if that means
doing bad things. Encourage them when they are polite.
5. Be patient. It is true that most children are self-centered by
nature. Every parent recognizes this very early in the parenting charge, and
it's up to you to turn this around. Teach them the importance of respecting
others people's feelings and needs. As they learn to listen more, speak less,
esteem others, and humble themselves, their Golden Rule behavior will begin to
shine forth.
6. Learn to coach. Many people are finding that they need someone to
not only hold them accountable but to listen to their dreams, desires, and
goals. Help your child to establish social goals that will better equip him or
her for daily interpersonal communication and interaction. It is no secret that
people don't really like to be around others who are rude and obnoxious. No
parent wants this for their child. Make a point to sit down and talk with them
and listen to areas of struggle they may have when interacting with other
people.
7. Teach table manners. Proper etiquette obviously includes table manners,
so start teaching your children the basics from a very early age. Use
age-appropriate lessons and reward them for following the rules.
8. Correct him or her on the spot. Very young children often times
don't realize what they are doing. For example, if you are speaking with a
friend, your child might thing it's okay to interrupt you. Beg your friend's
pardon and let your child know that his or her interruption is inappropriate.
Do this for any infraction your child commits. Make sure you use sensitivity in
these types of situations. If you have an overly sensitive child, you might
want to excuse yourself and speak with him or her privately.
9. Speak well. Speech habits are so important. Often parents may
sabotage their children's speech patterns by using language they don't want
their children to mimic. Again, this is an area in which you need to model the
correct behavior. Unless you want your child to speak in a sloppy, slang-ridden
way, be well-spoken yourself.
10.Lose the prejudices. Your children are going to model your biases.
If you hold strong opinions about a particular group or person, you should not
make this a public point. Teach your children to judge a person by their
character and not race, gender, religion, or nationality.
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