| Banishing
Rudeness
Teaching children to stop rude behavior is as easy
as 1-2-3.
by Julie Bort
PARENTGUIDE NEWS August 2007
One of the A-list tasks on every parent’s agenda is
to raise well-mannered children. But just because we all want polite kids,
doesn’t mean that our kids will automatically respond to our wishes
and be polite. In fact, our children often have a sixth sense about such
things, picking exactly the wrong moment to engage in rude behavior, such
as spewing a smart-aleck comment at a visiting relative or making a disparaging
remark about a gift to the gift giver.
Rudeness is, of course, a normal human behavior. When your child’s
rudeness causes you to have a red-faced moment, remember that every one
of us has times when we are not polite.
Even so, parents continually feel overwhelmed when confronting rudeness
in their children. It angers and embarrasses them. When your children
behave rudely toward others, it can make you feel as if you are doing
something wrong as a parent, and this failure is on public display. When
your children behave badly to you, it can make you feel angry and unappreciated.
However, once you understand the keys to teaching polite behavior, you
can combat rudeness and any subsequent emotional angst it might cause
in you.
Be on the Lookout
Stopping rudeness in children is a three-step process, combining awareness,
modeling and practice.
For the first step, awareness, you gently but pointedly make your children
aware when they are engaging in behavior that is not acceptable. If the
rudeness is verbal, understand that there are two parts to communication:
what you say (the content) and how you say it (the delivery). These parts
have a hierarchy— content always trumps delivery. If the content
is rude, then no matter how the message is delivered it will always be
rude. For example, your child says, “I hate this present, Aunt Sara!”
You cannot merely fix the problem by getting your child to curtsey the
next time she says, “Aunt Sara, I find this present to be awful.”
In addition, the content of the message could be perfectly acceptable,
but the delivery may not. Your daughter might say, “Move over so
I can sit down on the couch, Aunt Sara!” This would be polite if
the phrase changed to, “May I please join you on the couch, Aunt
Sara?”
When making children aware of their rudeness, begin by pinpointing what
they did that was rude. For a child who expressed displeasure at a gift,
a parent might pull the child aside and quietly say: “What you are
saying is rude. It is not nice to tell someone that you don’t like
the present they bought for you. If you do not like a present, simply
say thank you and tell the giver that you are happy he or she thought
of you.” In this way, you are not teaching your child to replace
unacceptable content by lying, such as having a child say she loved a
present she didn’t. Rather, you are showing your child that in any
situation, there are ways to be polite and kind.
If the rudeness is in the delivery, be specific about that, too. Tell
your child, “That tone of voice is not alright.”
The caveat to awareness— you must also use awareness on yourself.
What are your own rude habits? Chances are that your children’s
rudeness mimics your own and is triggered under the same circumstances.
For instance, I tend to use sarcasm when I’m exhausted or highly
frustrated. Not surprisingly, my daughters are likely to snipe at me when
they are tired or frustrated. I don’t like such rudeness, but at
least I understand it.
Show How It’s Done
Once you have pointed out that a behavior is rude, the next step is to
show the child a more polite alternative. Give the child the specific
words and tone of voice to use.
This is the part of the process where self-awareness is crucial. If your
own rudeness is triggered by anger or embarrassment, and you feel angry
or embarrassed at your child’s rude behavior, you may subtly be
acting rude to your child. You may be frowning or using a sarcastic tone
of voice. Even if you are seething with negative feelings in reaction
to your darling offspring’s rudeness, you still need to control
and model, in an accurate tone of voice, the exact words and polite delivery
you want your child to use.
An overly cheerful tone of voice is better to correct rudeness than a
subtly chiding tone of voice. This is because modeling is more powerful
than the content of your words. Done well, it illustrates that a person
can be polite even when something is upsetting. That is, just because
the child’s behavior angered or embarrassed you, doesn’t mean
you have to use angry or embarrassed words and actions. Just because the
child is frustrated with the gift, doesn’t mean the child needs
to use frustrated words to the gift giver.
Finally, insist that the child repeat what you modeled, exactly as you
modeled it. It is critical that children immediately practice the correct,
polite words and tone of voice so that they can experientially learn the
difference between the unacceptable behavior and the desirable one.
Say, for example, you have just told your preschooler that a demanding
tone of voice is rude and you showed the child the desired tone by saying:
“Please don’t talk to me in a rude voice. If you would like
more juice, please say, ‘Mommy, may I have some more juice?’”
At first, your child ignores you so you gently insist by saying: “I
can’t help you until you talk to me politely like this, ‘Mommy,
may I have some more juice?’”
Very soon, your child will answer, “OK; Mommy, may I have some more
juice?” At that point, praise your child’s good manners: “Of
course, sweetie. When you ask me politely, I’m happy to get it for
you.”
And shazam! You have banished rudeness.
Julie Bort is co-author of Mommy Guilt: Learn How
to Worry Less, Focus on What Matters Most and Raise Happier Kids (AMACOM).
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