The magic of stickers
I'm not above bribery.
Call it positive reinforcement. Jonathan got to put a sticker on his "good eater" chart every time he ate a meal without us having to ask him to keep eating. Thirty-six stickers represents a whole lot of successes. When he filled the whole chart he got to go to the store with dad and pick out some ice cream. He chose chocolate chip ice cream sandwiches, and we certainly didn't have to remind him to eat.
And Seth of course got to share in the victory. You just don't give ONE boy an ice cream sandwich.
Call it positive reinforcement. Jonathan got to put a sticker on his "good eater" chart every time he ate a meal without us having to ask him to keep eating. Thirty-six stickers represents a whole lot of successes. When he filled the whole chart he got to go to the store with dad and pick out some ice cream. He chose chocolate chip ice cream sandwiches, and we certainly didn't have to remind him to eat.
And Seth of course got to share in the victory. You just don't give ONE boy an ice cream sandwich.
2 Comments:
At 11/29/2006 7:47 PM , Mary said...
Those are some pretty sweet Cinderella stickers if I may say so. I hear those worked for Dani pretty well when she was potty-training too :)
At 11/29/2006 9:52 PM , Christine said...
It's Sleeping Beauty. Cinderella is the one in blue. Honestly Mary. :o)
I think I detect a slight crush because he kept choosing her over race cars, trains and blues clues. . .
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