Home / Parenting 3 ways to raise your toddler to be a ‘can-do’ kiddo #2. Practice optimism and safe risk-taking. Wheeee! By Richard Rende, Ph.D. August 9, 2016 Rectangle There are many pressures on parents to engage toddlers in activities that may give them a competitive advantage now and later in adulthood. The reality is that we may be inadvertently crafting childhood experiences that inhibit children’s natural inclinations and welfare—the real traits that will help children thrive as adults. Surveys of over 100,000 college freshmen that have been conducted annually for 50 years have been showing increasing levels of depression and a lack of well-being in recent years. Rather than focusing on a competitive advantage in childhood, parents may want to focus their efforts on raising children who will succeed in an uncertain world by carving out their own unique pathways to success. To thrive, children will need to know how to navigate new situations, be flexible thinkers, be self-starters who are resilient, and work with others. There are many things you can do as a parent, supported by decades of research and evidence-based practices, that will help you raise your child to be a ‘doer.’ The good news? Many of these practices consist of spending positive time with your toddler and enjoying that time with them. Here are three techniques for raising your toddler to be a can-do kid. Encourage exploration and innovation. Toddlers love to explore. They love to touch and manipulate and use their senses. They like to try things. Some studies show that toddlers are essentially “little scientists” who are wired to hypothesize, test, evaluate, and try again. How do you promote these attributes? First, give kids free time. (We know you are really bummed about this, mama. ?) With a little practice, your child will start to figure out what to do with this free time and, in the process, learn to be self-motivated. Provide some building blocks, crayons, and Play-Doh. Let them play in the dirt and on the playground. Take them for walks in the woods or on the beach or even around the backyard. Don’t critique or look for a final product. Simply chat with them, ask them about what they are doing, and share their wonder for the world they are exploring. Your toddler will be developing the skills needed to cognitively explore and manipulate information, and engage in divergent thinking—the root of innovation. Practice optimism and safe risk-taking. We hear a lot about overprotecting kids, but learning how to let your child engage in a few safe (and beneficial) risks can open doors to discovering the world. The trick is to find the balance between safe and unsafe risk-taking. Walking side-by-side along a creek collecting leaves together is safe as long as your child is being attended. Allowing a child to walk solo along this path is probably not a safe bet. If your tot wants to climb a tree, make sure it’s a feasible goal. Scaffold their attempts and if they slip and fall, comfort them quickly and encourage them to try again in the hope that they may go a little higher this time. Your little one will quickly learn to take on tasks that are out of their comfort zone and stick with them through the bumps and bruises. They will measure their success in effort and gradual progress. There’s your growth mindset, resilience, and grit right there, mama. Teach them to understand others. Toddlers are developmentally ready to begin learning how to take others’ perspectives and develop a theory of mind—the realization that we each have our own way of seeing the world. Talk about feelings and emotions every chance you get. Your child’s feelings, your feelings, other people’s feelings, and heck, even your dog’s feelings. When you read books together, chat about the characters and what they are thinking and feeling. When they are playing with other kids, you can begin to help them understand that their peers have feelings. This understanding will help your child learn how to manage conflicts. Help your child practice having conversations with others—yourself, grandparents, doctors, friends, or even the person who runs the fruit stand. Conversational skills may help your tot hone their ability to get along with others. Let your tot help you around the house with little chores. These cooperative skills will help your child to develop empathy and a sense of value for helping others as well as themselves. Introducing your child to these activities as a toddler will promote the 21st century skills (e.g., creative problem-solving, critical thinking, collaboration, and communication) that will serve your child well decades from now. Bonus: These activities just so happen to be what toddlers want to do with their time. Win-win. The latest News Father of 3 realizes the true weight of his wife’s ‘mental load’ after 8 days alone with the kids Health & Wellness What parents should know about hidden risks at splash pads, according to a new CDC report Pregnancy This is how pregnancy transforms the brain, according to a new study Celebrity News Amber Heard is expecting baby no. 2—redefining single motherhood on her own terms