Personalized Baby Gifts - Gund | Serena & Lily Crib Bedding | All Things Christmas | Baby & Kids Bedding | Baby Gifts & Diaper Bags
Baby & Children's Boutique | Storage and Organization Solutions | Offender Search | Net Nanny | FREE Color Address Labels
FREE Zoobooks Issue and Tiger Poster | Student Health Insurance | Webdecals | Personalized Gifts | Stop Puppy Mills

Support a Nat'l Amusement Park Ride Safety Act!

Protect Your Family Child Safety Book: "I KNOW SAFETY!"
Best Buy Weekly Specials!

MyParenTime.com's Articles
| Article List | Submit an Article |


Potty Training – Get Ready, Get Set, Go!

Get Ready

If your child is near or has passed his first birthday, you can begin incorporating pre-potty training ideas into his life. They are simple things that will lay the groundwork for potty training and will make the process much easier when you're ready to begin.

  • During diaper changes, narrate the process to teach your toddler the words and meanings for bathroom-related functions, such as pee-pee and poo-poo. Include descriptive words that you'll use during the process, such as wet, dry, wipe, and wash.

  • If you're comfortable with it, bring your child with you when you use the toilet. Explain what you're doing. Tell him that when he gets bigger, he'll put his pee-pee and poo-poo in the toilet instead of in his diaper. Let him flush the toilet if he wants to.

  • Help your toddler identify what's happening when she wets or fills her diaper. Tell her, "You're going poo-poo in your diaper." Have her watch you dump and flush.

  • Start giving your child simple directions and help him to follow them. For example, ask him to get a toy from another room or to put the spoon in the dishwasher.

  • Encourage your child to do things on her own: put on her socks, pull up her pants, carry a cup to the sink, or fetch a book.

  • Have a daily sit-and-read time together.

  • Take the readiness quiz again every month or two to see if you're ready to move on to active potty learning.

Get Set
  • Buy a potty chair, a dozen pairs of training pants, four or more elastic-waist pants or shorts, and a supply of pull-up diapers or disposables with a feel-the-wetness sensation liner.

  • Put the potty in the bathroom, and tell your child what it's for.

  • Read books about going potty to your child.

  • Let your child practice just sitting on the potty without expecting a deposit.

Go
  • Begin dressing your child in training pants or pull-up diapers.

  • Create a potty routine--have your child sit on the potty when she first wakes up, after meals, before getting in the car, and before bed.

  • If your child looks like she needs to go--tell, don't ask! Say, "Let's go to the potty."

  • Boys and girls both can learn sitting down. Teach your son to hold his penis down. He can learn to stand when he's tall enough to reach.

  • Your child must relax to go: read a book, tell a story, sing, or talk about the day.

  • Make hand washing a fun part of the routine. Keep a step stool by the sink, and have colorful, child-friendly soap available.

  • Praise her when she goes!

  • Expect accidents, and clean them up calmly.

  • Matter-of-factly use diapers or pull-ups for naps and bedtime.

  • Either cover the car seat or use pull-ups or diapers for car trips.

  • Visit new bathrooms frequently when away from home.

  • Be patient! It will take three to twelve months for your child to be an independent toileter.

Stop
  • If your child has temper tantrums or sheds tears over potty training, or if you find yourself getting angry, then stop training. Review your training plan and then try again, using a slightly different approach if necessary, in a month or two.


Click here to read other articles by Elizabeth Pantley.

Copyright © Elizabeth Pantley. Excerpted with permission from "The No-Cry Potty Training Solution: Gentle Ways to Help Your Child Say Good-Bye to Diapers" by Elizabeth Pantley. Reprinted with permission.




| Article List | Submit an Article |

HELP KEEP THIS SITE ONLINE
If you have found our articles helpful, please consider helping us keep our community online. We appreciate your support :)!

 
| Soy Candles | Organize Your Home and Your Life | Baby names | Web Decals | Soy Candles, Scented Candles |
| Family Car Stickers | Educational Toys | Board Games & Puzzles | "I Know Safety" | Neighborhood Search |
| Parents, Get Net Detective | MyParenTime.com Text Sponsors |

| My ParenTime Home | Printable Checklists Home | Privacy | Legal | Disclaimer | Copyright |
| About Us | Site Map | Articles | Child Safety | OPK FAQ | BBT Charting | Breastfeeding Guide |
| Completely You | Hints & Tips | Online Games | Calculators | Special Reviews | Informative Websites |
| College Information | Greeting Cards | Magazines | Shop | Reminder Service | Guestbook |
| Search | Our Awards | Webrings | Link to Us | Add Your Link | Advertise | Text Sponsors | Forums |
| No SPAM! |

Copyright © 1997-2008, My ParenTime
No reprints without written permission.

Designed & Maintained by Blue Stream Designs
Our Website Community is Proudly hosted by FutureQuestClick Here To Get Your Site Hosted With FutureQuest


Other Websites in the My ParenTime Family Community:
| stopsexoffenders.com | jupiterparents.com | printablechecklists.com | funinternetgames.com |