Post by misty on Jan 6, 2007 16:53:55 GMT -5
Misty..........Thread Started on Aug 6, 2006, 12:53am
Your Job as a Role Model
by: Anthony Kane, MD
A certain educator was once asked at what point should a parent begin to prepare for child raising.
"How old are you?" the educator inquired.
"Twenty-three."
"You should begin twenty-three years ago."
What is the message? The single most important thing a parent can do to educate a child is to provide the child with a good role model. A parent has to work a whole lifetime becoming the type of person that he wants his child to become.
www.adhd-made-simple.com/role_model.html
So.....What I'd like is for us all to list some things we do to be good role models to our children.
I'll start.
One thing I always do is show respect to service workers.Being polite to cashiers, not getting upset if they give me the wrong change, giving the mailman a popsicle on a hot day, thanking the mentally challenged baggers at the grocery store, tipping our waitress well, etc. Its worked....my daughter is 12 & I see her displaying the same courtesies.
Also, My whole family loves the elderly! I mean we think they are adoreable & we all go out of our way to help them. We cut our 83 yr old neighbors grass for free, give up our seats for them, visit nursing homes, things like that. Shannon definately learned that from us! I SEE her displ;aying those same qualities!
marja
Misty, I like this and it´s so important, for any kid w/adhd or not.
I do the same as you, I try to show my kid´s that you must respect all people even if they are challenged by some way, I am polite and theach them to be polite too. I talk a lot, so my kid´s are used to mom talking to people at stores and elsewhere, just to be friendly and polite and care... I hope they´ll see that you can be friendly without expecting some profit of it.
I am a firm believer on model-based learning, I think that´s the most powerfull way to learn, some pattern´s of behaviour come subcostanly by the way´s you see other´s do thing´s..
So, it put´s some pressure to think that own behaviour is something you want to see your kid´s doing...
Your Job as a Role Model
by: Anthony Kane, MD
A certain educator was once asked at what point should a parent begin to prepare for child raising.
"How old are you?" the educator inquired.
"Twenty-three."
"You should begin twenty-three years ago."
What is the message? The single most important thing a parent can do to educate a child is to provide the child with a good role model. A parent has to work a whole lifetime becoming the type of person that he wants his child to become.
www.adhd-made-simple.com/role_model.html
So.....What I'd like is for us all to list some things we do to be good role models to our children.
I'll start.
One thing I always do is show respect to service workers.Being polite to cashiers, not getting upset if they give me the wrong change, giving the mailman a popsicle on a hot day, thanking the mentally challenged baggers at the grocery store, tipping our waitress well, etc. Its worked....my daughter is 12 & I see her displaying the same courtesies.
Also, My whole family loves the elderly! I mean we think they are adoreable & we all go out of our way to help them. We cut our 83 yr old neighbors grass for free, give up our seats for them, visit nursing homes, things like that. Shannon definately learned that from us! I SEE her displ;aying those same qualities!
marja
Misty, I like this and it´s so important, for any kid w/adhd or not.
I do the same as you, I try to show my kid´s that you must respect all people even if they are challenged by some way, I am polite and theach them to be polite too. I talk a lot, so my kid´s are used to mom talking to people at stores and elsewhere, just to be friendly and polite and care... I hope they´ll see that you can be friendly without expecting some profit of it.
I am a firm believer on model-based learning, I think that´s the most powerfull way to learn, some pattern´s of behaviour come subcostanly by the way´s you see other´s do thing´s..
So, it put´s some pressure to think that own behaviour is something you want to see your kid´s doing...