Q: What would be a
good way to teach children to address adults as either ma’am or sir? We live in
the South, and this type of respect is very common. I want my two children,
ages two and five, to do this as a sign of respect and a nod to our culture. But
I’m always nagging my older child to add the ma’am and sir. I’m tired
of sounding like a broken record. I don’t want to make this a big deal, but I
want results and no more nagging!
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A: We, too, believe in adding ma’am and sir after yeses and nos, and it took a little time before our children caught on. We
simply decided that it was a big deal and then worked on it with all of the
kids at once (the youngest was around three at the time).
The easiest way to do this is to tell your children that you
expect them to answer any adult—including you—with yes/no ma’am/sir. Inform the
older child once, then stop giving second chances. No prompting, “Yes, what?”
The younger one, you’ll need to make it more of a game, but he should follow
the example of his older sibling in time.
When he doesn’t answer correctly by just saying, “Yes,” then
send him directly to his room for an hour, keep him inside for an hour or pull
the plug on a favorite TV show for the day—whatever you think will make an
impression on him. At five, he’s plenty old enough to remember to say ma’am and
sir.
With the holidays just around the corner, now is the perfect time
for practicing his manners. Before we head out to go trick-or-treating, I remind
my children that if they don’t remember to say, “Trick or Treat” and “Please,”
and “Thank you,” when they knock on door—in a voice loud enough for us to hear
them—then the candy they receive goes into Mom and Dad’s stash. That’s enough
to make them overcome their “shyness” and remember their manners.
Coming in early 2014,
Sarah and Mary Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love &
Leadership in a four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for
more information.
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