Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sharing never means taking something out of someone’s hand! Come on, parents, you know this one!
So what does it mean? Sending a whining parent over to a kid to say, please share?
Sharing means asking the other child if you can also play with the toy, waiting patiently for them to finish, and respecting them if they say no.
It's important to teach kids sharing, but it's also equally as important to teach kids that wanting something doesn't mean you'll get it right away, and that it's okay to tell other people no if they want something you have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sharing never means taking something out of someone’s hand! Come on, parents, you know this one!
So what does it mean? Sending a whining parent over to a kid to say, please share?
Anonymous wrote:Sharing never means taking something out of someone’s hand! Come on, parents, you know this one!
Anonymous wrote:Preschool teacher here - what your child did was normal. Kids have to make mistakes to learn. Sometimes hearing corrections from other people can be more powerful and effective. If the grandma had said “oh it’s okay the baby doesn’t care” your child would not learn important information about manners in a public space.
The grandma’s language was perfect.
If something like that happens again you could tell the person “ thank you for helping them with that”
And don’t be embarrassed - really! It is their job to find out about the world and what happens....it’s our job to tell them gently and kindly what the rules are. And then help them when they break them. Because they will, over and over again.
Part of what’s so frustrating about parenting is being in situations where you feel your child should know better. But they have to learn that not only do we not take toys from babies at the library, we don’t take toys at preschool, or the park, or the children’s museum, etc
Anonymous wrote:I was in the library playroom with my 3 year old today and there was a grandmother with her nine or ten month grandchild. My child took a toy out of the baby’s hand to play with it and the grandmother said, “please don’t take toys out of his hand. Please give it back to him”. My child walked over to me and I told her to give it back. She did and the grandmother said thank you.
No big deal, right? No one did anything wrong, right? I just feel embarrassed and judged now and keep thinking about how I should have said something first. Or the grandmother took it all way too seriously and had no business correcting my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Depends. Was the toy a library toy for everyone’s use? If so, we are possibly entering gray area here because grandma might want to focus on sharing. If it was the kid’s personal property, then we’re in different territory because it’s the kid’s possession (or the grandmother’s). There are also lessons about personal space and manners. But we are so accustomed to elevating property “rights” in this country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you, OP. Grandma shouldn’t have corrected your LO. Your kid behaved in a developmentally appropriate way. It’s sad that grandma was more focused on “mine mine mine” than making sure everyone had a good time and that her grandchild was learning about sharing.
This is preposterous on multiple levels.
First, this has nothing to do with sharing - OP's kid took the toy out of a much younger kid's hand.
Second, you are seriously suggesting that a parent why watches another kid mistreat her kid shouldn't intervene? Come on.
Finally, you seem to believe that "developmentally appropriate" is the same as "acceptable behavior." It isn't. This situation is a perfect example of a 3 yo engaging in developmentally appropriate behavior that is not acceptable, and needs to be corrected. Preferably by the parent; but if the parent doesn't, then by another adult.
Anonymous wrote:
You've got a painful 18 years ahead of you if you're embarrassed by a normal course of events.
Thank your child for returning the toy and tell her not to take toys from other people's hands. And enforce.