What if your child is more of a follower
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AnnBrunoXO
2 Girls For Me!
Member since 5/05 4377 total posts
Name: MaMMa
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What if your child is more of a follower
than a leader?
My oldest seems to be a bit of a follower around her classmates/friends and I don't want her to be.
I want her to listen to the teacher - forget about all the other distractions, copying others etc.....
How can i better reinforce this? She is an excellent student otherwise, is starting to read and writes very well.
I want her to be more independent, outspoken - she turned 5 in February.
TIA.
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Posted 5/12/11 5:29 PM |
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Eireann
Two ladies and a gentleman!
Member since 5/05 12165 total posts
Name:
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Re: What if your child is more of a follower
A lot of times, your posts about your older DD remind me of my older DD. She is definitely NOT a leader; in school especially she is a quiet girl who does exactly what she's told and hates to go against the grain. She's very fearful of doing the wrong thing or getting into trouble...as a result, she's definitely more of a follower although I wouldn't necessarily say she IS a follower, if that makes any sense.
I wish she were a different way because she is a lot like I was/am and I always wished I were more of a take-charge person, etc. I don't know that there's a whole lot you can do if that's what her nature is. I do always remind my DD to stand up for herself though. If someone makes fun of her or says, "I'm not your friend..." I tell her, "Guess what? She's right...she's not your friend if she would say something like that to you." I remind her that she is a wonderful girl who has so many great qualities and that there are many other people to be friends with.
On a more concrete level, I enroll her in several extra-curricular things to make a variety of friends and be able to function in different settings. So she does Daisy Scouts, art club and ballet. I also hope these things will increase her confidence in herself.
I don't know if this was of any help... I hope to hear some more responses as well!
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Posted 5/12/11 5:54 PM |
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AnnBrunoXO
2 Girls For Me!
Member since 5/05 4377 total posts
Name: MaMMa
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Re: What if your child is more of a follower
Posted by Eireann
A lot of times, your posts about your older DD remind me of my older DD. She is definitely NOT a leader; in school especially she is a quiet girl who does exactly what she's told and hates to go against the grain. She's very fearful of doing the wrong thing or getting into trouble...as a result, she's definitely more of a follower although I wouldn't necessarily say she IS a follower, if that makes any sense.
I wish she were a different way because she is a lot like I was/am and I always wished I were more of a take-charge person, etc. I don't know that there's a whole lot you can do if that's what her nature is. I do always remind my DD to stand up for herself though. If someone makes fun of her or says, "I'm not your friend..." I tell her, "Guess what? She's right...she's not your friend if she would say something like that to you." I remind her that she is a wonderful girl who has so many great qualities and that there are many other people to be friends with.
On a more concrete level, I enroll her in several extra-curricular things to make a variety of friends and be able to function in different settings. So she does Daisy Scouts, art club and ballet. I also hope these things will increase her confidence in herself.
I don't know if this was of any help... I hope to hear some more responses as well! Hi!! Thank you for responding! It may just be the older sister syndrome?? i don't know - My youngest is a bit of the opposite - she is shy in the beginning but later could care less about what everybody else does - she will go for it, listens to her teacher and is content with playing my herself and doing something on her own if need be. She doesn't observe others like my oldest does. I feel like my oldest is a bit insecure - she finds reassurance from others (her peers) more than adults or her teacher. We signed her up for tennis and she copies what the other kids do - not really focusing on the teacher too much. Granted its her first tennis lesson - but i could see a pattern and its a bit frustrating but it could just be her nature like you said. Her friend was touching the net, sitting down when she wasn't suppose too - and there goes my daughter doing the same thing. I told her to pay attention to the teacher, not her friends - and that the teacher knows the rules and will help her. I told her to not copy others because they could be doing the wrong thing too. She is so bright and intelligent but yet so vulnerable and a follower in situations with her peers. I want to boost her esteem and would really love some advice. We do plenty of playdates, go to the park, free events, she recently started tennis, go to PREk - we are always around people. My husband was totally not a follower - but I sort of was the shy one - not a leader at all - although with age ive become more assertive and strong. I remember being like her also to an extent - and it could be very hard - i just want her to be secure but it just may be a part of her growing up and learning about herself?
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Posted 5/12/11 7:02 PM |
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ajsmomliz
LIF Infant
Member since 5/11 107 total posts
Name:
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Re: What if your child is more of a follower
I have to laugh because I was having a conversation about my son just recently and think the same thing of him. I think it is more now (just turned 5 in March) that he will be starting school and forming his friendships that I am more cautious of this. As a parent you can only control so many things and for me all I want is for him to have confidence and choose good people. But he tends to follow the silliness and I just foresee problems down the road. Call it paranoia, but I want him to be strong enough to stand on his own two feet and do what's right because he knows he should, not cause everyone else it. So I try to be more of a role model, I try to promote and encourage the things he does do well and hope that the positive reinforcement will stay with him in the days ahead.
Good Luck!
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Posted 5/13/11 11:01 AM |
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BaroqueMama
Chase is one!
Member since 5/05 27530 total posts
Name: me
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Re: What if your child is more of a follower
Not everyone is going to be a leader and I think that's perfectly ok. In fact, I think we tend to put too much emphasis on our children being leaders when really, we need to be teaching them that it's good to be a follower sometimes or most times, but to be so responsibly. My advice is to teach her to respect the rules of her classroom and teach her to make good choices, even when others aren't. That's really the most valuable lesson you can teach her. Just keep talking to her about it. I'll pose situations to my daughter and ask her what she would do. We kind of role play, I guess, because I want her to really learn that many, many times her friends will be doing things that are not ok and she cannot follow them all the time. It's hard to teach them that, but keep talking to her about it and she will learn.
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Posted 5/15/11 8:21 AM |
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