My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Talk to others about child development and behaviour stages here. You can find more information on our development calendar.

Behaviour/development

Would you say 'good girl' to a 9yo who stopped because a car was coming off a drive..

51 replies

dollybird · 08/09/2008 22:52

.. or would you expect her to stop and therefore not say anything? DH saw our neighbours childminder say this to her DD and thought she was too old for that.

OP posts:
Report
misdee · 08/09/2008 22:53

of course.

Report
Reginaphilangy · 08/09/2008 22:54

I probably would say 'good girl' - its an automatic response

Report
elesbells · 08/09/2008 22:54

yes I would - praise is good at any age is it not?

Report
Heathcliffscathy · 08/09/2008 22:54

what a totally weird question.

Report
ParCark · 08/09/2008 22:55

Message withdrawn

Report
dollybird · 08/09/2008 22:56

ok, slopes off..

OP posts:
Report
SlartyBartFast · 08/09/2008 22:56

yup, automatic. whyever not?

Report
cornsilk · 08/09/2008 22:56

I would. Is your dh a judgey judgey pants?

Report
GrimmaTheNome · 08/09/2008 22:57

Definitely would. 9 year olds can be overconfident and get careless about cars.

Report
piratecat · 08/09/2008 22:58

i would, jsut a kid still.
why have you posted, do yuthink your dh was being too judgemental??

Report
marmadukescarlet · 08/09/2008 23:00

Don't you praise your children when they behave? I think not praising good behaviour is more odd I'm afraid.

I expect my children to clear their plates from the table, but I still thank them when they do so.

Children need positive contact (praise) to validate their effort to behave well.

Report
undercovercat · 08/09/2008 23:01

yes i would and i do.

Report
dollybird · 08/09/2008 23:02

maybe we both are a bit. our kids would just do it and they're younger so thought it would be second nature by 9. maybe naive?

OP posts:
Report
marmadukescarlet · 08/09/2008 23:03

Who's naive, you or your neighbour?

Report
undercovercat · 08/09/2008 23:03

your are just positively reinforcing something you expect them to do, hoping they do it again.
I do it with plates, picking washing up, putting shoes away, shutting car doors helping me with the shopping..

Report
harpomarx · 08/09/2008 23:04

well, obviously your kids are verrry mature and good road crossers!

Report
SmugColditz · 08/09/2008 23:04

It was my mother thinking I was too old to be praised that led to my shocking self esteem problems as a young teenager. I thought she had stopped loving me.

Report
harpomarx · 08/09/2008 23:05

was that the right response ?

Report
frankbestfriend · 08/09/2008 23:05

I would think the reason she stopped automatically in the first place was because of the good teaching and positive re enforcement on the part of her carers.

Praise is good for children regardless of their age.Agree with sophable, the question is a complete no brainer.

Report
dollybird · 08/09/2008 23:07

us naive. anyway, i do praise them for all sorts of stuff all the time. wish I hadn't said anything.

OP posts:
Report
dollybird · 08/09/2008 23:07

thanks harpomarx

OP posts:
Report
cornsilk · 08/09/2008 23:08

Dollybird don't be upset!

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Overmydeadbody · 08/09/2008 23:09

I wouldn't make an active decision not to praise, but I certainly don't praise DS everytime he uses good road sense, I expect him to behave appropriately when crossing roads and riding his bike in the street.

He is 5 now. When he was first learning I would praise obviously, but I'd hope it is just second nature to him now.

Report
Overmydeadbody · 08/09/2008 23:09

I think it is actually quite interesting dollybird!

Report
Overmydeadbody · 08/09/2008 23:10

Most praise is just automatic isn't it?

DS has started praising me though. It is rather disconcerting!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.