Anonymous wrote:Extra curricular faith based education. Kids are taught to honor their mother and father for example.
Anonymous wrote:I am in Kuwait visiting family and I am pleased with how well mannered and polite the Kuwaiti teens and children are. I wonder how one would instill such nice manners in children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like tips on this as well.
My kid is actually pretty polite to other people but has recently become quite rude to us at home. I thought we were doing very well but obviously we've gone wrong somewhere because some of the behavior is quite bad. We don't tolerate it -- there are always consequences. Sometimes the consequences just provoke more rudeness though. She is 6.
This is also seeping into behavior towards others, however. While she is still very polite to people's faces, recently she threw a huge fit when I said we needed to write a thank you note for a gift a friend had sent. Just a few months ago this would have been a non-issue -- she is proud of her writing and loves sending/receiving mail, so this has never been a challenge in the 2-3 years that we've been doing it.
I am at a loss. I've been reading books on teaching children manners and dealing with rudeness in early elementary, but many of them focus on kids who never had these skills. For us it is a mystery because she's always been pretty mild-mannered and polite, helpful and kind at home. But lately she rolls her eyes at us, refuses to do basic things like clear her plate from the table, orders us around, or when she's really mad, says she hates us or wants us to die. I do not understand what has happened.
For what it's worth, we are always polite and respectful towards her, which I felt was a good way to teach manners and seemed to be working until recently.
How's her sleep? My normally well-behaved kids get really snippy when they're tired.
Also, how much screen time does she get?
Anonymous wrote:I have extremely polite teens and get told this.
Model it always. This is #1.
Remind them constantly. You will feel you are saying it 1000 times. If they don’t do it remind them every single time you are with them even if it’s just your family.
Be specific about when to say it and how to say it. When mrs Smith drops you off, thank her for the ride. Afterward…did you thank Mrs Smith for the ride?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like tips on this as well.
My kid is actually pretty polite to other people but has recently become quite rude to us at home. I thought we were doing very well but obviously we've gone wrong somewhere because some of the behavior is quite bad. We don't tolerate it -- there are always consequences. Sometimes the consequences just provoke more rudeness though. She is 6.
This is also seeping into behavior towards others, however. While she is still very polite to people's faces, recently she threw a huge fit when I said we needed to write a thank you note for a gift a friend had sent. Just a few months ago this would have been a non-issue -- she is proud of her writing and loves sending/receiving mail, so this has never been a challenge in the 2-3 years that we've been doing it.
I am at a loss. I've been reading books on teaching children manners and dealing with rudeness in early elementary, but many of them focus on kids who never had these skills. For us it is a mystery because she's always been pretty mild-mannered and polite, helpful and kind at home. But lately she rolls her eyes at us, refuses to do basic things like clear her plate from the table, orders us around, or when she's really mad, says she hates us or wants us to die. I do not understand what has happened.
For what it's worth, we are always polite and respectful towards her, which I felt was a good way to teach manners and seemed to be working until recently.
How's her sleep? My normally well-behaved kids get really snippy when they're tired.
Also, how much screen time does she get?
Anonymous wrote:For starters, don't give a kid what they want when they're demanding something. I require a nice tone and the word please before giving it to them. Sometimes my kids have to try multiple times.
"give me the ketchup", -no, try again.
(Irritated)"give me the ketchup please"- no, try again.
(Nice tone),"can you please give me the ketchup" - yes, here it is.
Anonymous wrote:I am in Kuwait visiting family and I am pleased with how well mannered and polite the Kuwaiti teens and children are. I wonder how one would instill such nice manners in children.