Anonymous wrote:I have 3 1/2 yr old b/g twins and what you're describing (both the dominance and the challenge of sharing) is quite typical.
Are they in preschool or will they be? Ours are going into preschool for help w/ exactly these kind of socialization skills.
Empower Twin B more - give him/her the toys (or the most desired one) and make A ask for them. Use a timer to enforce "turns" so that they have to take turns and switch off when the timer goes off.
Set up ways to allow Twin B to make decisions (we have a game where we hide something in one hand and whoever guesses the right hand w/ the item in it gets to decide which game we play first. We often rig the game so the less dominant twin gets to made the call.)
Talk w/ your employers about enrolling the twins in activities, maybe even separate activities.
Arrange playdates but end them (leave, walk away, etc...) when a child doesn't share well. Being removed from a desired activity has a HUGE impact on my kids - it's one of our best tools for behavior management.
You need to find ways to constantly reinforce the behavior you want and to build on success. You might also try reward charts (we haven't done this yet but are considering it.)
Thanks for the suggestions. All things I do and will continue to do. I have them 50 hours a week so I feel like my consistency is helpful. I'd be willing to guess that MB&DD aren't quite as consistent although they share the same exasperated frustration. They are in preschool and next year they will be in different classes to try to help twin B with his confidence and independence.
I often do the removing, but feel bad for twin B because he suffers the consequence even though he didn't really do anything.
We'll see! I think this may have been more of a vent then anything.
4 year olds!!