Anonymous wrote: I’ve been working and daycare for a couple years and prior to that I’ve never heard that term being used. The majority of teachers use it and a lot of them use it in the negative way and maybe with an aggressive tone. I’ve even heard children repeat it saying to other children in a very rude way which is the same way they hear their teacher say it. When children are that young they don’t understand things with multiple terms. They hear the term no thank you being used in a - way way more than they hear it in a positive way. I refuse to use that with the children because when I teach them the meaning of no thank you I want it to be when we’re playing kitchen and they offer me food. That is the proper way to say no thank you to a child. There are many other terms that teachers and parents could use if they wanna avoid just using the word no.
Anonymous wrote:The preschools and nannies are right. "No, thank you" is the appropriate answer to model for toddlers. Their opportunities to say 'no" aren't like an adult's, they say no to refuse something, in which case following with a "thank you" is the polite way. My toddler has been saying "no, thanks" since 18 months, always appropriately.
When do you think a toddler would say "no, thank you" inappropriately, anyway? Give me an example.
Anonymous wrote:The preschools and nannies are right. "No, thank you" is the appropriate answer to model for toddlers. Their opportunities to say 'no" aren't like an adult's, they say no to refuse something, in which case following with a "thank you" is the polite way. My toddler has been saying "no, thanks" since 18 months, always appropriately.
When do you think a toddler would say "no, thank you" inappropriately, anyway? Give me an example.
Anonymous wrote:The preschools and nannies are right. "No, thank you" is the appropriate answer to model for toddlers. Their opportunities to say 'no" aren't like an adult's, they say no to refuse something, in which case following with a "thank you" is the polite way. My toddler has been saying "no, thanks" since 18 months, always appropriately.
When do you think a toddler would say "no, thank you" inappropriately, anyway? Give me an example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am from the Midwest, and we really talk like this all of the time. Do people really not say "no thank you" on the east coast?
Um, no, you don't. I'm from the Midwest, too, and I don't say, "No thank you," when someone tries to hit me in the face or steal my things. I say, "No! Stop it!" Maybe if I'm feeling polite, I say, "Please stop it!" I say, "No, thank you," when someone asks me if I'd like a glass of water.
Anonymous wrote:I don't mind it. It helps the child focus on the fact that his or her behavior affects others. The "no thank you" indicates that the person saying "no" doesn't want the behavior and that there's an exchange going on.