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All parents worry if their approach to discipline is the right one. There are such heated debates over everything from spanking vs. non-spanking to using "bribes" to get your child to cooperate that it's hard to know where you stand on any issue. Not to mention the fact that it seems like every "expert" in the field of child rearing has a different opinion than the next on the subject of discipline.
With toddlers, a parent's main goal should be to redirect whatever negative behavior is occurring and tell the child what the correct behavior should be. Have you ever noticed that, for example, if your child is standing on your bed and you say "Don't jump" that the first thing he/she does is start jumping?? That's because toddlers, and most children, don't hear the "don't" but can easily focus in on the "jump"! In this instance, your positive wording would take the "Don't jump" to "Only sitting is allowed on the bed." Here's another example. Your toddler has decided she wants to color with her new crayons so you sit her in her chair at the table and spread out her pad of paper. But, as toddlers will do, she decides it will be more fun to draw on the new placemats you just bought the day before...sound familiar? A parent's first reaction is usually "Don't draw on that!" But, positive wording would sound like this, "Draw on paper only" or "Crayons are only for coloring on paper." Here are a few for you to try. For each example of negative wording try to replace it with positive wording. Try them on your own first and listed below are some acceptable alternatives.
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