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Parenting Solutions: Bad Manners (page 3)

By Michele Borba, Ed.D.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Step 2. Rapid Response

  • Target manners that need tuning up. The first step to your new response is to look over the Eighty-Five Crucial Manners to Teach Your Child (p. 145) and choose a few manners your child now lacks that would boost his courtesy quotient. Or just watch your child a bit more closely in social settings and assess which manners need tuning up. Feel free to make a long list, but select only one or two new etiquette skills to teach each week.
  • Model the new manner. Kids learn new skills best by seeing an example of what you expect, not by hearing your lecture. So show your child the manner you want him to learn. Suppose you want to teach your child to make an introduction. "I'll pretend I'm meeting you for the first time: 'Hi! I'm Jane. What's your name? Do you live in Reno?'" Now he has a model to copy, and you can expect him to use it.
  • Hold manner "lookouts." Point out others who are using the skill. That way your child will see when and how the manner should be used in action: "When we go out to dinner, let's watch to see how many people remember to put their napkin in their lap before eating." "We're going to Grandma's today. Let's see how she meets us at the door like a good hostess." (Just do remind your kids to keep their "manner discoveries" quiet so that they don't blare out their findings to the world.)
  • Acknowledge courtesy attempts. Support your child's courtesy attempts by letting him know they are appreciated: "Wow, nice manners! Did you notice the smile on Grandma's face when you thanked her for dinner?" "Waiting for the others to sit down before you began eating was polite." Just remember to point out exactly what your child did that was polite so that he'll be more likely to repeat the courteous action again.
  • Be consistent! Good manners do not develop naturally, but instead are the result of considerable effort, patience, and diligent training. There's no way around it. So keep encouraging your child's efforts and teaching new manner skills until you get the results you hope for. And don't settle for less.
  • Set a consequence for repeat discourtesy. If your kid still uses bad manners despite your etiquette lessons, it's time to take things up a notch and enforce a consequence. Depending on your child's age and the severity of the offense, you might try requiring your kid to repeat the correct polite behavior ten times in a row on the spot, or to say or even write a sincere apology note to the offended party. For especially offensive discourteous behaviors, up the stakes by forbidding your child to attend social gatherings for an appropriate period of time. Doing so helps your kid get the message that you expect well-mannered behavior.
One Simple Solution

One of the simplest and most essential manners that every child should learn is a handshake, as it is a universal greeting. You can begin when your child is three years old. Just be sure to teach the two critical elements to a proper handshake: shake the person's hand with a firm grip and maintain eye contact. Practice the greeting with your child until he feels confident using it in the real world. You'll also be giving your child a jump-start for success: surveys show that one of the first things employers look for is whether a candidate knows how to use a proper handshake.3

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