Do not start toilet training until both you and your child are ready. You are ready when you are able to devote the time and energy necessary to encourage your child on a daily basis for at least 3 months.
Your child is ready when he or she can signal that the diaper is wet or soiled, or when your child is able to say that he or she would like to go to the potty. This usually occurs when a child is 18 to 24 months of age. However, it is not uncommon for a child to still be in diapers at 2 and a half to 3 years of age.
Allow your child to be present when you go to the bathroom and make your child feel comfortable in the bathroom. Allow your child to see urine and bowel movements in the toilet. Let your child play with flushing the toilet.
Before toilet training your child, place a potty chair in your child's normal living and play area so that your child will become familiar with the potty. Consider placing a potty chair on each floor of the house if you live in a multilevel home. Allow your child to observe, touch and become familiar with the potty chair.
Tell your child that the potty chair is his or her own chair. Allow your child to sit fully clothed on the potty chair, as if it were a regular chair. Allow your child to leave the potty chair at any time. Do not force your child to spend time sitting on the chair.
After your child has become used to the potty chair and sits on it regularly with his or her clothes on, try having your child sit on the potty without wearing pants and a diaper. Let your child become comfortable with sitting on the potty without wearing pants and a diaper.
The next step is to show your child how the potty chair is used. Place stool from a dirty diaper into the potty chair. Allow your child to observe the transfer of the bowel movement from the potty chair into the toilet. Let your child flush the toilet and watch the bowel movement disappear down the toilet.
After your child has become comfortable with flushing the toilet and sitting on the potty chair, you may begin teaching your child to go to the bathroom. Keep your child in loose, easily removable pants.
Place your child on the potty chair whenever he or she signals the need to go to the bathroom. Your child's facial expression may change when he or she feels the need to urinate or to have a bowel movement. Your child may stop any activity he or she is engaged in when he or she feels the need to go to the bathroom.
Most children have a bowel movement once a day, usually within an hour after eating. Most children urinate within an hour after having a large drink.
In addition to watching for signals that your child needs to urinate or have a bowel movement, place your child on the potty at regular intervals. This may be as often as every 1-1/2 to 2 hours.
Stay with your child when he or she is on the potty chair. Reading or talking to your child when he or she is sitting on the potty may help your child relax. Praise your child when he or she goes to the bathroom in the potty chair, but do not express disappointment if your child does not urinate or have a bowel movement in the potty. Be patient with your child.
Once your child has learned to use the potty chair, your child can begin using an over-the-toilet seat and a step-up stool.
How long will it take to toilet train my child?
It may take up to 3 months. It is important for you to be patient and supportive. Do not punish your child when he or she has an accident.
If your child is not toilet trained within 3 months, consult your family doctor. The most likely reason your child has not learned to use the potty is that your child is not yet ready for toilet training.
2006-07-30 09:00:05
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answer #1
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answered by ~^~RuStIc~^~ReG~^~ 2
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Well 3 weeks is really not enough time! Potty training takes a lot of time!!!!! Maybe your daughter is not ready? I am not sure how old she is but they say for girls it is between 2 and 2 and a half before they are ready! Some kids are ready faster than the others. Here is something that worked for my son and maybe it would work for you.
He would always go behind the chair in the living room and poop and pee in his pants. Finally I just moved his potty chair behind there and there he went every time! Then in a bout a week I moved the chair out in front of the rocking chair. Then into the bathroom and then my son was done! But he was already 3 years old.
Also they get potty trained a lot faster than poop trained! So be willing to have it take a few months and you have to keep on doing it not stop one day because you are tired f it. Also make sure your daughter is ready!
2006-07-30 08:46:59
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Lots and Lots of patience!!!! Is she interested in the toilet? If it's a struggle just to get her to sit, then she clearly is not ready. Do not force it, because that will just make her dislike the idea even more!! She will let you know when its her time.
If she does seem interested in the toilet, then let her sit on the potty for a long time, and keep her entertained. I gave my daughter special "bathroom books " that we only got to look at while sitting on the potty. Also, lots and lots of praise. make a huge deal out of the fact that she went pee in the potty, but try not to get upset when she does go in her pants. Its easy to forget that kids get stressed too, and don't handle negativity well.
I personally don't like the reward system, just because once a child is trained, they sometimes are still looking for that reward, and when its denied, they may do a backslide, and return to their old ways. I've seen this happen. However, I have seen several peolpe use this system and it worked out just fine.
I'm a mother of 2 and a preschool teacher, and also worked in a daycare center. I've seen lots of potty training methods, some that work, and some that don't. Just do what comes natural to you and your daughter. Patience is the key, and as I said earlier, your daughter will do it when shes ready.
Hop this works!!! Good Luck!!!
2006-07-30 09:16:51
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answer #3
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answered by bmg061877 2
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2016-04-11 13:27:40
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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Three weeks plainly isn't long enough for your baby but don't give up. This weather is a blessing - she can go without pants in the garden and just have the potty wherever she is. I promise you that she'll get the idea and it'll be just fine. Just don't stress out about it as that only makes it a problem. If Mummy doesn't see it as a problem then baby won't get stressed either. Good luck - you will manage this!
2006-07-30 08:43:48
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answer #5
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answered by The librarian 5
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tell her that is wrong....You are getting your two year old used to the training pants...take the training pants away from her, and sit her on the potty chair..
take this advice:
You should choose a potty chair once your child has shown that she is ready to begin toilet training. You can have her decorate it with stickers and sit on it with her clothes on to watch TV, etc. to help her get used to it. Whenever your child shows signs of needing to urinate or have a bowel movement you should ask her if she wants to use the potty or take her to the chair and explain to her what you want him to do.
Only keep her seated for a few minutes at a time, don't insist and prepared to delay training if she shows resistance. Until she is going in the potty, you can try to empty her dirty diapers into his potty chair to help demonstrate what you want him to do.
2006-07-30 08:44:49
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answer #6
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answered by JOLIE69 2
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Wait until she needs the toilet, tell her to tell you when she does need to go then put her on the potty, tell her by how using the potty she is a big girl, if she uses the potty buy her a gift (not all of the time. It doesn't have to be that expensive)
2006-07-30 08:47:19
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answer #7
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answered by penguini_9214 3
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patience and encouragement.........start by placing her on the potty as soon as she wakes up in the morning...they usually need to go at that time....and then lots of praise......if you make a big deal out of it, she begins to get the idea that she's doing a good thing. Also get her training pants with a favorite cartoon character and tell her it's her job to make sure the little guy stays dry.
2006-07-30 08:42:47
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answer #8
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answered by Jan 4
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Hi the simple way is to take her out of training pants and put her into ordinary panties she may wet them a couple of times and she will soon realise how uncomfortable it is. I did this with my four children and my three grandchildren who I look after all day. It works every time,
The same goes for bedtime nappies they think that is why they wear them, take the bedtime nappy off and put her in pyjamas with one of those wet proofs sheets you can buy, you will find that works as well, of course it may not work the first night or two but she will realise that she is not wearing a nappy and that will stop as well.
2006-07-30 12:18:19
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answer #9
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answered by sylvia w 1
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You can pour a bit of luke warm water between her legs.. or..
you can leave the faucet running while she's sitting on the potty..
I prefer using the faucet.. but to get her started the first few times, maybe thew warm water is alright..
Both have worked with the little girls in our family.. eventually, she will get the idea.. then praise her for having done her job..
2006-07-30 08:47:39
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answer #10
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answered by sassy 6
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