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Failure to share creates many conflicts in early childhood settings. As a parent, we are often embarassed by their child's perceived stinginess. A toddler is often simply asserting herself and claiming possession of her own toys. Or, simply too young to have the patience for another child to take a turn with a toy.
Tips for Parents
Karen Miles published some useful tips for teaching sharing on the Parent Center website. Some of her suggestions are adapted below.
- Make sharing fun. Teach your preschooler cooperative games in which players work together toward a common goal. Do puzzles together, taking turns adding pieces, for instance. Share projects, too: plant the garden, paint the fence, or hose down the car with him. Finally, give him things to share with his buddies now and then, like a special snack for preschool or a roll of stickers to divvy up during a playdate.
- Don't punish stinginess. If you tell your preschooler that he's selfish, discipline him when he doesn't share, or force him to hand over a prized possession, you'll foster resentment, not generosity. To encourage sharing, use positive reinforcement rather than admonishment. Keep in mind, too, that it's okay for your preschooler to hold back certain items. As he matures, he'll learn that sharing with friends - who are becoming increasingly important to him - is more fun than keeping things to himself.
- Talk it up. When kids squabble over toys, help them figure out what's really going on. If a friend is holding something back, explain to your child how his buddy might be feeling. For instance: "Josh really likes that toy, and he doesn't want anyone to play with it right now." Help your preschooler put his own feelings into words too. When he's not acting especially generous, ask him what's up.
- Teach your preschooler to problem-solve. If your child has a death grip on a toy truck that his playmate wants, chances are he's thinking, "It's either him or me." The concept of sharing the truck may not even have occurred to him. Encourage your preschooler to take turns with the truck (setting a kitchen timer to mark each child's turn may help), reassure him that sharing isn't the same as giving away, and point out that if he shares his toys with friends, they'll be more inclined to share theirs with him.
- Respect your preschooler's things. If your youngster feels that his clothes, books, and toys are being manhandled, it's unlikely that he'll give them up even for a moment. So ask permission before you borrow his colored pencils, and give him the option of saying no. Make sure that siblings, friends, and babysitters respect his things too, by asking if they can use them and by taking good care of them when they do.
- Lead by example. The best way for your preschooler to learn generosity is to witness it. So share your ice cream with him. Offer him your scarf to fashion into a superhero's cape, and ask if you can try on his new cap. Use the word share to describe what you're doing, and don't forget to teach him that intangibles (like feelings, ideas, and stories) can be shared too. Most important, let him see you give and take, compromise, and share with others.
Books to Read with Children
I Can Share by Karen Katz
Sharing is Fun by Joanna Cole
Num, Num, Num! A Bea and HaHa Book by Emily Jenkins
This song is part of our Songs of Belonging series, which consists of the following twelve song titles:
Friends
Hands
My Family
A Tree and Me
I Can Count On You
I Look Up to You
Me and You
One World
Somebody Loves Me
Someone to Talk To
The Sharing Song
Together Time
This song is available in the following formats:
- Download this song in MP3 format
- Download all 12 Songs of Belonging songs
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