TO BE SOCIALLY INTELLIGENT CHILDREN HAVE TO INTERACT WITH PEERS
TO BE SOCIALLY INTELLIGENT CHILDREN HAVE TO INTERACT WITH
PEERS
By Domenick j. Maglio PhD. Traditional Realist
The primary responsibility of parents is to teach a child
how to be functional in the world. They have to train the child in basic interactional
skills such as emotional appropriateness, responsibility, decision-making,
perseverance, talking clearly, independence, manners, and moral values. Most of these tasks have to begin early to
have the children gain the confidence and necessary skills to be considered
normal. This is an incredible agenda to establish in the first three
years.
Once the groundwork is seeded the child is ready to branch
out with his peers but not before the parent’s instructions for their children.
This gives them a heads up in becoming socially acceptable. Children become
more isolated and shunned if they have not learned appropriate responses from
their parents before going to preschool.
Around the age of three years the child learns from studying
and imitating other children in the environment. Preschool children select
certain youngsters as role models. The choice a preschooler picks to be a best
friend is often surprising. There are too many variables, which depend on the
child’s particular circumstances. The new found friend may be similar to one of
their siblings, a media character they fell in love with or have certain
personality traits that laughs or smiles and makes her feel happy and
comfortable.
The maturing of the individual child is a mixture of innate
attributes, family and other authority figure expectations and standards as
well as the knowledge learned especially from their peers. The child they
admired the most consciously or unconsciously is the individual most likely to
be imitated. As their idol changes so does their attitudes, thinking and body
language. These modifications are not readily noted but serve to slowly shape
their social skills and overall personality.
This interaction with peers is a growing process for
children. However, in our current culture a major deterrent for children
getting together is parental fear. Modern parents view the shielding of their
child from any danger as their top priority. An unsupervised peer interaction
of their child with other children is frightening to them. The media highlighting
of modern bullying in our culture has created neurotic parents. They believe
they have to hover over their children to protect them from traumatic bullying
episodes.
On the other side of the equation, the more contact children
have with peers, the more opportunity they have to experience, experiment and
learn from others. This enables them to identify what they want to do in
shaping their own emerging personality. Children begin to unconsciously copy
their own new friends’ smile, way of speaking, walking, laughing, actions, and
almost anything that strikes their fancy. They try out new behaviors and
attitudes to see how it feels for them without input from adults. They are
learning to be more interdependent while building their own personalities.
Most children are incredibly opinionated and critical about
other peer’s actions. They are unfiltered and hold back no punches. If another
child looks weak, an aggressive child will quickly test him to find out how far
the fragile child will let him take advantage by pushing him until he realized
the other child will not cease. Finally in frustration and anger the naïve
child returns the favor by pushing the child back. The game stops at this
point. The innocent child learns the reality of peace through strength. This is
a concrete lesson in standing up for oneself. It is an unfiltered, direct means
of learning the rules of the child-jungle, which helps them establish their behavior
patterns in dealing with peers.
This is a major reason an only child is at a significant
disadvantage compared to a child coming from a family with siblings. Children
tell and show each other things that would be ignored if said by an adult. They
learn from each other how to act appropriately. “Don’t cry when you get hurt
because you are acting like a baby.” This statement coming from a respected
group member is more powerful than having to endure a lecture from a
significant adult. Crying is like honey to a bear. It is a signal to the bully
to attack.
The best protection a child has is himself. By interacting
he will develop the social skills and abilities to handle peer issues.
Excluding a child from independent relationships with his peers will not only
delay his social maturity but could cause the child to be awkward or even a
misfit among children.
Domenick Maglio, PhD.
is a columnist carried by various newspapers, an author of several books and
owner/director of Wider Horizons School, a college prep program. Dr. Maglio is
an author of weekly newspaper articles, INVASION WITHIN and a new just published book, entitled, IN
CHARGE PARENTING In a PC World. You can visit Dr. Maglio at
www.drmaglio.blogspot.com.
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