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Behavior in Public Places: Teaching Good Behavior
Taking children to restaurants and grocery,
discount, and department stores can be both fun and
educational.
Training
Trips
To make trips to public places more
enjoyable, begin by taking some "training trips." These are
short trips made for the purpose of teaching your child how
to behave in public places.
- Training trips should not last more
than 5 to 15 minutes.
- Choose a time when the store or
restaurant is not very busy.
- Training trips should be for teaching,
not for shopping or eating.
- Rules should be stated before you
leave home, as matter-of-factly as possible, and
restated immediately before you enter the "training
area." Some suggestions for rules include:
a. Stay with Mom or Dad. Do not walk
alone.
b. Do not pick up or touch things
without permission from Mom or Dad.
c. We are not going to buy anything on
this trip.
- Give your child a lot of brief,
nonverbal, physical contact (at least once every minute
or half-minute) for good behavior. Occasionally praise
your child, saying, for example, "Mike, you sure are
being good," "You're staying right next to Mommy," or
"Thank you for not picking up any candy."
- Maintain frequent physical contact
with your child. Touch him gently on the back, rough up
his hair, or briefly give him a hug, pulling him next to
you.
General Guidelines
- Involve your child in the activity as
much as possible. Have her get groceries for you or
place them in the cart. Give your child instructions,
such as "Get me the green can, please," or "Bring me the
bag of pretzels, please." Don't forget to say "please"
and "thank you" when appropriate.
- Talk to your child about what you are
doing. For example, you might say, "We're going to make
sloppy joes with this hamburger meat. You really like
sloppy joes, don't you?".
- This is also a good time to teach your
child about his world. For example, "Bananas grow on
trees. What else can you think of that grows on trees?"
or "All fruits have a skin or cover on them to protect
them from rain and bugs."
- By your frequent physical contact,
praise, teaching, and pleasant conversation, your child
will be much more interested in the trip. By actually
helping you, he will learn that stores are a fun place
to visit.
- If your child breaks one of your
rules, immediately make her sit in "time-out." This can
be any place that is generally out of the normal flow of
foot traffic. In a grocery store, you can just point to
one of the tile floor squares and firmly tell your child
to sit on that square because she walked away from you.
In a restaurant, you can turn your child's chair around.
If the restaurant is not very crowded, you can place
your child on another chair about 3 to 4 feet away from
you. As soon as your child is quiet for about half a
minute, tell her that it is okay to get up or to turn
her chair back to the table.
- Generally the better your child
behaves at home, the better he'll behave in public. When
you are having trouble in public, step up your efforts
at home.
- Remember, praise and attention, along
with discipline, are the tools for teaching your child.
Discipline alone will not work. Using praise and
attention with discipline will work to make your trips
to stores and restaurants much more enjoyable for both
of you.
- Be consistent. Straying from your
training one time could ruin months of successful trips.
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Written by E. Christophersen, PhD, author of "Little People: Guidelines for
Commonsense Child Rearing."
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.
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© 2010 Texas Children's Hospital
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