Helping
Your Child
with Socialization
The Next Step
Eventually, if things continue to progress well, the young child should be
allowed to try a short visit to the neighbor's house. This also must be
structured. The mother should accompany the child to the appointed place and
make arrangements to pick him up at a specified time, suggesting that she be
contacted by phone if the visit needs to be terminated earlier. She should not
drop Johnny off and head for the nearest grocery store. There is a strong
possibility that he may panic during his first giant experience and decide that
he wants to go home "right now!"
Gradually, de-structure can take place. Perhaps the mother will need only to
walk her child to the corner and watch while he travels the rest of the distance
alone. Finally, the child may be allowed to go all by himself. making a phone
call to his mother when he reaches his destination. Of course, hopefully, social
development and chronological age will continue until such time as the child can
come and go to his friend's house as he chooses, without the wearisome planning.
Spontaneity, after all, is a great part of the pure joy of children's play.
A note of caution: In these hazardous days, parents are well advised to be
cautious about letting a child walk from one house to another even in the
immediate neighborhood. One mother solved the problem by "shadowing"
her child, hiding behind a tree or a fence. The child thought he was making th
journey alone and grew in self-confidence while the mother could be sure he had
reached his destination safely.
Group Play
It is now time to enlarge the child's group, and the experience repeats
itself, with mother structuring initial group contacts and standing alert to
terminate them if the play session begins to deteriorate. Group play, for some
reason, seem to hold a greater possibility for disaster than one-to-one play.
Children tend to "gang up" and take sides. But this, too, can be
circumvented if the parent is creative and innovative. Nothing is quite so
effective as a quick and attractive change of subject. (It's called an ace in
the hole!) "Who wants to help me bake cookies?" or "Who knows how
to wash a car?" will work wonders.
Inappropriate Language
Youngsters sometimes experiment and use language inappropriately, including
highly unacceptable profanity, the meaning of which they probably don't know.
How to handle such situations? Firmly and immediately! Letting it go until a
later time means that the correction will lose its punch and impact. What is
needed is a strong (without anger) statement-e.g.. "That is not the way we
speak in out family." That is all that is necessary and makes it possible
to correct the child without "putting him down" in front of his
friends.
Inappropriate Action
The same principal applies as above. Pushing, shoving, hitting or outright
inappropriate "pranks" need to be handled on the spot. No lecturing.
"I'm putting you in your room because you shoved Tommy" may be all
that is necessary. No "Why did you do that?" et cetera, which only
belabors and clouds the situation and misdirects the thrust of the corrective
action. Yes, there will be times when your child had to take defensive
action-and you can deal with such situations by curtailing interaction with a
specific youngster who may indeed be taking advantage of your child's
vulnerability.
Working with the Teacher
All of the social interaction you have provided for your child will spill
over into the school situation, and you can be sure that teachers will be very
grateful. (Too often the child reaches the classroom totally untutored in social
relationships, and the teacher is expected to do the job.) Most teachers will
react favorably to a request for a conference on social needs. This is the time
to explain what you have tried to do on the home front. You can discuss your
child's needs for a special friend. After becoming familiar with the
personalities of the youngsters in her class, perhaps the teacher can arrange to
team your child with another child of similar disposition and interests in terms
of seating, play-pairs, playground-pairs and even walking to and from school. To
return the favor, you may want to volunteer for special events (class parties,
plays, et cetera) for your child's class.
During the period of social growth there will be minor triumphs, but the road
will undoubtedly be rutted with an occasional major disaster. Parents should not
be disheartened. Children tend to have spurts of physical, intellectual, and
social growth laced with periods of holding their own or even periods of
regression.
The key words are structure and fun, with simplicity. The key attitudes are
warmth and optimism. And if you treat your child like a worthwhile human being.
it is much more likely that other children will also sense his worth.
Special Needs Children
Children with ADHD and learning
disabilities may need extra help in developing social skills. The
Impulsivity and the short frustration tolerance of an ADHD child can lead to
poor peer relationships. Children with poor attention and concentration
fail to tune in to the social cues in their environment and thus don't learn
social skills through experience. Children with learning disabilities may
have difficulty processing information form the social environment or have
difficulty with self-expression.
Helpful Books On Helping Children With
Socialization
Books For Parents
Good
Friends Are Hard to Find : Help Your Child Find, Make and Keep Friends
Help!
the Kids Are at It Again : Using Kids' Quarrels to Teach 'People' Skills
Books For Kids
Be
Nice To Your Friends
Fun
With Friends
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