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Making children more confident in approaching adults, has actually made them less so
Jewish World Review ^
| March 6, 2003
| Betsy Hart
Posted on 03/06/2003 4:53:44 AM PST by SJackson
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To: babble-on
Each has always been that way. I am sure to my satisfaction that it is a result of their respective personalities, which they were born with, not their training. I agree 100%! I have four children who all have different personalities. I've heard people make the claim that homeschooling makes children more outgoing and comfortable talking to adults. Well, I homeschool mine and some of them are friendly and comfortable with adults and some aren't. It's personality!! Now, they are all respectful, just not always chatty :-).
To: missycocopuffs
My DH and I recently visited [...] Uh oh... I was thinking baseball when I first read that; not domestic bliss!
<]B^)
22
posted on
03/06/2003 9:50:27 PM PST
by
Erasmus
To: cantfindagoodscreenname
being respectful and being chatty are not the same thing... i have one son (6yrs.) who is timid and shy, but he is respectful... he has been taught to look people in the eye, acknowledge those who are speaking with him... he easily orders his own food in restaurants and will ask a salesperson for assistance when he needs it, even though he was not comfortable doing this at first... but he is not one to begin conversations... now my 2 yr. old is not so shy... he will stick out his hand and say, "how do you do?" and answer, "fine--thank you," when asked the same--and not feel uncomfortable at all... i have known some disrespectful chatty kids who want all the attention for themselves... i don't think the writer meant that chattiness was politeness... one can be shy, but that does not make it fine for them to not acknowledge an adult who is addressing them, especially in that adult's own home...
23
posted on
03/07/2003 10:44:11 PM PST
by
scripter
To: SJackson
Look what kids are told now about strangers. We are freaking them out with warnings of molestation and abduction one day, and then asking them to be confident and conversational with strangers the next?
When I was a kid, I was vaguely aware of bad people I wasn't supposed to talk to.... But it was not drilled into me like it is today. Too bad really that it is so.
24
posted on
03/07/2003 10:49:18 PM PST
by
HairOfTheDog
(Hold to your purpose.... May the blessings of all free folk go with you.)
To: scripter
reposting the following because my first post came under my husband's account... and i added something at the end that i had forgotten the first time...
being respectful and being chatty are not the same thing... i have one son (6yrs.) who is timid and shy, but he is respectful... he has been taught to look people in the eye, acknowledge those who are speaking with him... he easily orders his own food in restaurants and will ask a salesperson for assistance when he needs it, even though he was not comfortable doing this at first... but he is not one to begin conversations... now my 2 yr. old is not so shy... he will stick out his hand and say, "how do you do?" and answer, "fine--thank you," when asked the same--and not feel uncomfortable at all... i have known some disrespectful chatty kids who want all the attention for themselves... i don't think the writer meant that chattiness was politeness... one can be shy, but that does not make it fine for them to not acknowledge an adult who is addressing them, especially in that adult's own home... and that should have nothing to do with personality, but manners... IMHO, of course...
To: scripter
i have known some disrespectful chatty kids who want all the attention for themselvesYes, I know what you mean, :-).
... i don't think the writer meant that chattiness was politeness
I wasn't really responding to the article, but to the person who wrote the post. And I wasn't disagreeing, either...just sort of thinking out loud. I hope you didn't think I was being antagonistic. I agree with everything you said.
To: No More Gore Anymore
My son is very chatty. I've found that adults either adore him and find him engaging or they think he's rude, talks too much and should be put in his place. I'm learning that I can judge people's character by how they respond to my son very well.
27
posted on
03/10/2003 12:26:05 PM PST
by
Marie
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