- 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.
This
article is an excerpt from The
No-Cry Potty Training Solution: Gentle Ways to Help Your Child
Say Good-Bye to Diapers by Elizabeth Pantley.
(McGraw-Hill, 2006)