Nutrition
Mealtime should be a pleasant time for the
family. Your child should be feeding himself completely on
his own now. Buy and serve healthy foods and limit snack
foods. Your child will still have a daily snack. Choose and
eat healthy snacks and limit junk food. If you are having
problems at mealtime, ask your health care provider for
advice.
Development
and Discipline
Children at this age often want to do things
by themselves; this is normal. Patience and encouragement
will help 3-year-olds develop new skills and build
self-confidence. Many children still require diapers during
the day or night. Avoid putting too many demands on the
child or shaming him about wearing diapers. Let your child
know how proud and happy you are as toilet training
progresses.
For behaviors that you would like to
encourage in your child, try to "catch your child being
good." That is, tell your child how proud you are when he
does what you want him to do. Be positive and enthusiastic
when your child does things to please you.
Here are some good methods for helping
children learn about rules and to keep them safe:
- Child-proof the home. Go through every
room in your house and remove anything that is either
valuable, dangerous, or messy. Preventive child-proofing
will stop many possible discipline problems. Don't
expect a child not to get into things just because you
say no.
- Divert and substitute. If a child is
playing with something you don't want him to have,
replace it with another object or toy that the child
enjoys. This approach avoids a fight and does not place
children in a situation where they'll say "no."
- Teach and lead. Have as few rules as
necessary and enforce them. These rules should be rules
important for the child's safety. If a rule is broken,
after a short, clear, and gentle explanation,
immediately find a place for your child to sit alone for
3 minutes. It is very important that a "time-out" comes
immediately after a rule is broken.
- Make consequences as logical as
possible. For example, if you don't stay in your car
seat, the car doesn't go. If you throw your food, you
don't get any more and may be hungry.
- Be consistent with discipline.
Remember that encouragement and praise are more likely
to motivate a young child than threats and fear. Do not
threaten a consequence that you do not carry out. If you
say there is a consequence for misbehavior and the child
misbehaves, carry through with the consequence gently,
but firmly.