It seems like I'm always posting about one child or another that won't listen I'll get one back on track and then another one has to try it, and then another. Sometimes 2-3 of them at once. The problem this time is a child 3 yrs and 4 months old. She just started here about 3 months ago. She's really quiet, listened fairly well all along (she'd have times of refusing to do as asked, but if told again in a really firm voice she'd eventually do it. And if we had to sit her in time-out it'd really upset her, so just the "threat" of needing a time-out would get her to shape up quickly). But now she just doesn't comply when asked to do ANYthing. Firm voice doesn't go anywhere. Time-outs don't work anymore. I always make sure I consistantly follow through with having her do whatever she was supposed to (like not climbing the slide. I can tell her "slide down, we don't climb the slide", or "use the ladder", until I'm blue in the face, but she continues to climb until I have to physically stop her and make her slide back down. That's when I sit her in a chair and don't let her play for a little while since she couldn't follow the rules). She'll continue doing what she wants with this stubborn look on her face. I know a lot of people say to redirect them for something like that, but when she gets that stubborn look on her face, and just goes back to it a couple minutes later over and over and over again, I KNOW redirection isn't going to work. And when she keeps saying "okay" really sweetly when told to do something (like "let's clean up our blocks"), but never does it until I physically make her (take her hand and walk her over to the blocks and repeat the direction, or physically have to take her hand and have her pick the block up, if she won't on her own) I don't know how to respond. It's that quiet "sweet" disobedience that I don't get. I think she needs an actual consequence, but besides time out for not listening, what can I do? I am always consistant with her and always end her stubborn round with her having to do whatever she was told to do to start with. But it's not making any difference yet. She just seems to be getting more stubborn. But if I give her a direction and then walk away like I just expect her to do it, she goes off and plays something else (or if she was told to stop doing something, she continues doing it), so walking away doesn't work either. I feel like I've tried everything with her (and everything everyone on here has advised before). She's not aggressive (thank goodness! One 3 yr old going through that is enough).
I do wonder if she might be delayed a little behind the others her age (like when she talks she's really difficult to understand, and if you ask her something she doesn't seem to know when to say no or yes. Side note: one time I heard her mom ask her if "the kids were nice to her today". Of course she said "no". But the children had been fine all day and no one had even made her mad that I was aware. A school ager could yell at her or be too rough with her, and she'll get all upset and cry, but if they asked, "Did I yell at you?" she'd say no). But another time when they had not yelled at her they could ask her if they did, and she'll say yes). She also doesn't seem to know how to answer an open ended question. Like during circle time I'll ask her a qurestion and she answers with something that makes absolutely no sense to what I asked. Could it be that she's not understanding what she's supposed to do? If that's it, though, why did she do it before? Like before, I might have had to get more firm and tell her to go back to her chair (if she's walking around while eating, for example), she'd finally do it, but now she won't. I always have to walk over to her, take her hand, and walk her to the table (and she resists that). Then as soon as I get her sat down and walk away to get someone more food or whatever, she gets up again and I have to repeat the whole thing over again.I'm just afraid of over using time-outs since she doesn't need "calmed down" or isn't being agressive. It seems silly to me to use time-out for not listening, but what other consequnce could there be for not listening? What is your input on this, if she was a child in your care?
I do wonder if she might be delayed a little behind the others her age (like when she talks she's really difficult to understand, and if you ask her something she doesn't seem to know when to say no or yes. Side note: one time I heard her mom ask her if "the kids were nice to her today". Of course she said "no". But the children had been fine all day and no one had even made her mad that I was aware. A school ager could yell at her or be too rough with her, and she'll get all upset and cry, but if they asked, "Did I yell at you?" she'd say no). But another time when they had not yelled at her they could ask her if they did, and she'll say yes). She also doesn't seem to know how to answer an open ended question. Like during circle time I'll ask her a qurestion and she answers with something that makes absolutely no sense to what I asked. Could it be that she's not understanding what she's supposed to do? If that's it, though, why did she do it before? Like before, I might have had to get more firm and tell her to go back to her chair (if she's walking around while eating, for example), she'd finally do it, but now she won't. I always have to walk over to her, take her hand, and walk her to the table (and she resists that). Then as soon as I get her sat down and walk away to get someone more food or whatever, she gets up again and I have to repeat the whole thing over again.I'm just afraid of over using time-outs since she doesn't need "calmed down" or isn't being agressive. It seems silly to me to use time-out for not listening, but what other consequnce could there be for not listening? What is your input on this, if she was a child in your care?
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