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Having Fun Play Dates (page 5)

By Fred Frankel
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Plan C

If the playmate turns you down most or all of the time and the family lives far from you, they may be turning you down to avoid driving. In this case, look for children in your neighborhood (see Chapters Four and Five). Avoid inviting a playmate over after he has turned you down twice without offering an invitation to your child.

If the other family never invites your child over but makes play dates with others in your area and if this is happening with many playmates, this can be a polite way of saying that your child doesn't behave well. It's time for a tune-up on the rules of a gracious host in Chapter Thirteen.

I've given you a lot of hints in this chapter. The checklist that follows helps you put this all together.

Basic Play Date Checklist

Planning the Play Date

Step 1:Decide with your child which playmate to invite.

  • Your child is to call and trade information.

Step 2: Set up the play date directly with the other child's parents.

  • Host play dates only when you are available to supervise.
  • About one to two hours for a play date is optimal as a start.

Step 3: Make sure siblings are busy elsewhere.

  • Make your child's room off-limits to siblings during the play date, and strictly enforce this.
  • Schedule play dates for siblings at the same time. One at your house and one at another child's house makes it easier on everyone.
  • Keep siblings busy with activities that span the play date (for instance, a video). If you can't keep a little brother or sister away for the entire time, schedule a shorter play date.
  • Have one parent take the sibling on his or her own special outing while the other parent supervises the play date.

Immediately Before Hosting the Play Date

Step 4: Clean up the place where the children will play.

  • Allow plenty of time for cleanup.
  • Help your child clean up in order to get the process going.
  • Don't threaten to take the play date away if your child doesn't want to clean her room.

Step 5: Prepare your child to be a gracious host.

  • Have some snacks ready.
  • Make noninteractive activities like the cell phone, TV, or video games off-limits.
  • Have your child put away any toys he doesn't wish to share or that might be broken. He has to share whatever he leaves out.

During the Play Date

Step 6: Supervise but don't include yourself. Listen from afar.

  • Be ready to offer snacks at a good time.

Step 7: Try to get to know the other child's parents at pick up.

After the Play Date

Step 8: Ask your child in private if he would like to play again with that playmate. Praise your child for something he did well during the play date.

Step 9: Reciprocate play date invitations with children your child likes.

The Next Step

If the play date went well and your child is developing close friendships, then relax: your child is now on the road to having best friends. If the play date was rocky and you frequently had to settle arguments, or the guest doesn't want to get together for a second play date, Chapter Thirteen will show you how to teach your child the rules of a gracious host.

Notes

1 Bagwell, C. L., Newcomb, A. F., & Bukowski, W. M. (1998). Preadolescent friendship and peer rejection as predictors of adult adjustment. Child Development, 69, 140-153.

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