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Misbehavior in Public Places: Rules and Discipline
Touching Things That Shouldn't Be Touched
Example
Grabbing food off the shelves in the grocery store.
The rule
"Don't touch anything without my permission, because
everything here belongs to the store and some things can
break."
Discipline technique
Mainly, distract your child on arrival by getting her a
snack, such as animal cookies.
Keep her involved by giving her safe foods to carry or
having her push the grocery cart.
If she's sitting in the grocery cart seat, hand her
foods to place in the basket.
Talk with your child as you shop so that she feels
involved.
Avoid taking your 2-year-old to a store with lots of
breakables, such as a glass shop.
Praise
Praise your child for helping.
Having a Temper Tantrum in a Public Place
Example
Often children have temper tantrums when they are not
given a toy or candy at the store after they beg for it.
The rule
"We buy only food at the grocery store, not toys."
Discipline technique
Ignore your child and remain firm. If your child is
having a temper tantrum in a safe place, walk on and he
will stand up and follow you. If your child is near
breakable objects or is a reckless child, take him
outside for time-out. If he is annoying other people (as
in a restaurant or church), take him outside.
Model
No yelling or tantrums in the store.
Running Away from the Parent in a Store
The rule
"Stay close to me in the store so you won't get lost."
Discipline technique
Time-out. First try putting your child in the grocery
cart for 2 or 3 minutes if she doesn't stay near you. If
she won't stay in the grocery cart, take her outside and
put her in time-out facing the wall of the building or
sitting inside your car while you stand by. Consider
buying a harness and bringing it with you to the store.
Harness your child only if she wanders off. Remove it
every 5 minutes, giving her a chance to prove that she
can control herself in a public setting. As a last
resort, leave your child at home with a sitter and be
sure to tell her before you go to the grocery store that
she can't come this time because she didn't stay near
you.
Praise
Praise your child for following you through the store.
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Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
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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