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Parenting Solutions: Bad Manners (page 4)

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

Step 3. Develop Habits for Change

Kids learn any skill best through repetition; give your child lots of opportunities to practice the new skill so that he can use his new manners confidently in the real world. Here are a few ways:

  • Target a manner a week. Some families practice a new manner each week. You might write the new manner (such as eating soup without slurping or waiting until the hostess sits before eating) on an index card. Then post the manner on your refrigerator as a family reminder so that everybody is practicing the same manner together.
  • Make mealtimes matter. Dinnertime is the perfect place to practice conversation skills and table manners with kids, such as keeping your napkin on your lap, chewing with your mouth closed, and learning which fork to use with each course. Take advantage of those mealtime moments. Here are a few manners to get you started: Please. Thank you. May I? Excuse me. Pardon me. I'm sorry. You go first. How was your day? How can I help? Please, may I be excused? Please pass.
  • Practice good host skills. Whenever your child has a friend over, use it as an opportunity to learn host etiquette. Remind your child of the "host basics": greet your guest at the door; ask the guest what he'd like to do; offer a snack; help him gather anything he left; walk the friend to the door; thank him for coming and say good-bye.
  • Teach tactful ways to decline an invitation. One of the basic traits of well-mannered kids is that they are considerate. So saying no to an invitation is often a difficult task because they don't want to hurt the person's feelings or appear impolite. One of the easiest ways to get out of any tricky situation is to teach your child to say, "Gee, I'd like to, but I'll have to check with my parents first" or "I wish I could, but I'll have to call you back after I look up the date." Your child can then plan how he will turn down the invitation tactfully (if he chooses to) by thinking through exactly what to say so he doesn't seem rude.
  • Plan a party. Start a monthly tradition like that of one of my friends in which you require your kids to help you plan a party just for your family. They can set the table—with the "company dishes"—arrange a centerpiece of handpicked flowers, and then sit down in their "Sunday best." At party time, this mother helped her kids practice more sophisticated table manners and learn the right eating utensils so that they would feel comfortable eating out. It was well worth the trouble because so many people told this mom how well mannered her kids were.
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