Before I potty trained my daughter I went to the library and checked out every
single potty training book on the shelf. While they were all full of helpful
hints about when, where, and who and how to potty train, none of them really
explained the why; that is, what exactly it is about each method that entices a
child to sit upon the porcelain throne and let loose that first time. Sure, most of the advice was good, but there’s
more to it then the “how to.” Behind every successful training tip there is
over a century of study on child psychology that has led toward all our modern
methods, and I wanted to find the connection between potty training and
developmental psychology.
So I looked back a little further, to those endearing pipe-smoking
balding and bespectacled old guys who
poured their lives into the detailed observation of children to leave us a
legacy of truth about just what it is that helps them learn. While they didn’t
all have something to say specifically about potties, I have found that when
you apply the science, you get much of the same information as the modern potty
training books are advocating. While I can only scratch the surface of each
theorist’s core ideas, I’m going to take a stab at what I would guess each of
them would have to say about potty training, if they were required to boil it
down for a blog post.
Len Vygotsky (1896 –1934) Soviet Belarusian Psychologist
Len Vygotsky |
Vygotsky’s theory was that children acquire knowledge in what
he called the Zone of Proximal Development, or ZPD. This means the gap between
what a child can do independently and what a child can do with your help. He
stated that proper interaction and support with a child can bridge this gap, so
that what a child can do with your assistance today, he will be able to do on
his own tomorrow. If you are attempting to teach outside of this zone, learning
isn’t going to happen as readily.
How does this relate to potty training? You need to be sure
you are in the zone. Your child should have something that she is able to
contribute to potty training before you begin, but it’s not necessary that she
should be able to do everything. Maybe
your child can walk to the potty, she can control her own bladder and bowels,
and perhaps she can communicate that she needs to go. But it’s possible that your child can’t undo
her own buttons, portion out toilet paper, or turn on the faucet. That’s okay.
Your assistance will bridge the gap between what she can do on her own and what
she can’t yet manage. You will work within the ZPD. If you think you need to wait until your
child is old enough to operate the faucet unsupervised, you may be waiting too
long. If you begin the process before she is able to contribute anything to the
process, you are starting too early. One of the complaints I hear often from caregivers
is that they had a parent tell them their child was potty trained, but they
were disappointed to discover the child was unable to wipe himself. One woman
even said to me, “if he can’t wipe, he ain’t trained!” Well not yet, perhaps, I thought. But he’s in
the upper reaches of the ZPD and if you aren’t willing to help him, it will
take an extended period of time to get him there.
Bronfenbrenner lists Vygotsky among his main influences. But
he went on to explore more external factors, not just the relationship between
caregiver and child. He developed the Ecological Systems Theory, which examines
the relationships between a child and his direct environments– home, school, community,
etc, the relationships between these environments. Each environment which
influences a child has its own norms, roles, and rules, and how a child relates
one to another affects the way he learns and develops. Inconsistencies between
environments can account for why a child behaves one way at home and another
way at school, for example.
When you are in the process of potty training, you need to
be aware that the home setting may not be the only influence on your child’s
learning. It is very important that the
methods and systems of potty training that you choose remain consistent from
one place to the next. If your child
goes to daycare or is in a shared custody agreement, or even if you have two
parents in the home, the method of training should be discussed between all
guardians and caregivers. If you are at
home telling your son that he is a big boy and doesn’t need diapers anymore,
it’s not going to help him if his daycare teacher is slipping pull-ups on him
as soon as you leave. If you’re telling
your child that he needs to learn to go to the potty when he feels the urge,
but your co-parent is making him sit for pre-determined amounts of time, the
mixed message will confuse your child and prolong the process.
Ernst von Glasersfeld (1917-2010) American philosopher and Psychology Professor
Von Glasersfeld’s claim to fame was his theory of Radical
Constructivism. It was a philosophical concept that stated that each person
constructs his own unique frame of knowledge based on his own experiences. To verbally
explain all your knowledge to another person will not yield the exact same body
of knowledge in the person being taught, because his own experiences will shape
his frame of mind on a given subject. More importantly, to passively teach someone
will not be as effective as allowing him to form his own understanding by
experiencing something for himself.
It seems like a stretch to bridge epistemology to toilet
training, but bear with me. Let’s ignore the philosophical debate about whether
or not all knowledge is subjective. We’ll imagine that it is for the purpose of
gaining toilet training knowledge. It may help you to know that explaining the use of the
potty to your child is not going to yield an identical frame of understanding.
You may be saying, “You sit here and go pee. You take some toilet paper, wash
your hands,” and so on. And in your mind
you are expressing the simplicity of a series of logical tasks. In your child’s mind, however, something
different is taking place. He is trying to frame this information within his
existing body of knowledge. All his life, he has eliminated in a diaper. What
you are telling him is that everything that has been easy and familiar is now
irrelevant. The potty is strange; none of the other sitting surfaces have holes
in them. Up until now removing one’s pants was frowned upon but now it’s expected.
If your approach is to sit down and explain the potty and have him use it in
one day, your child may be thinking, “This information does not corroborate
everything else I know. So I reject it.” (But not in so many words of course.)
The key to solving this, then, is to use a method that gradually introduces
toileting concepts from an early age so that children have a point of reference
before you begin. Let your child see his or her same-gendered parent using the
toilet. Let him play with a toy toilet. Let him see you empty the contents of a
diaper into a toilet and have him flush it. Do all these things long before the
first day you ditch the diapers and he will be more apt to get it.
Jean Piaget (1896-1980) Developmental Psychologist, Genetic Epistemologist
Jean Piaget |
Piaget was a master of observation. His clinical methods not
only studied the cognitive abilities children gained during various stages, he
also observed the mistakes they predictably made, and the significance of each.
He reasoned that the errors were what gave us a clear picture of what is
actually going on in children’s minds because they exposed the challenges they were
working on and the methods which resolved them. For example, when children draw
a chimney perpendicular to a roof instead of to the ground, it reveals that
they are still working on relative angles and are not yet able to conceptualize
the whole picture.
I believe parents should take this Piagtian approach when it
comes to their children having accidents. Rather than getting angry, take a
lesson from Piaget and ask yourself, “Why has this mistake occurred?” Perhaps
your child has an accident every time you strap her into her high chair and
every time you have a dispute. One could handle the mistake punitively, but
what if the reason for the accident is that your child is feeling a loss of
control? Punishing her will take even
more control away from her and worsen the underlying problem. Instead, it needs
to be resolved at the source. In this case, if you give her some freedom and more rights to
make decisions the accidents may cease without you even having to mention them.
I’ll also mention a second area of Piagetian theory I find incredibly useful: the
Schema. Piaget described a schema as a way of organizing information through
mental representation and in some cases, repetitive operations, as a way of
incorporating new information. More recent developments have looked at the
nature of "motor schemas" and found that children’s choice of repeated actions
give us insight into how they explore and learn. To put it very simply,
children are more likely to learn something if they can do it in a way that’s more
of the same of the thing they’re already doing. Your child may constantly throw
his toys because he learned about trajectories from his toy ball and he wants
to push the limits of that idea to see what else can fly, and how it flies.
He’ll likely perform the experiment again and again. This is his dominant
schema.
Now here’s the trick: When readying your child for future
potty use, knowing his dominant schema will be of great help. Take the child
who loves to toss things. If you give him a toy potty and a brown bean bag you
call a “poopy,” and let him toss, he’ll learn to associate the poopy with the potty,
and he’ll learn that getting it right inside is a good thing. If your child is
obsessed with opening and closing things, he’ll love it if you emphasize how
the potty lid goes up and down. If your child likes to wrap and enclose things,
she’ll love to familiarize herself with toilet paper by wrapping up toys with
it. If your child likes to transport and dump, instead of dumping the potty
right into the toilet, push it to the toilet and make dump truck sound effects.
If she likes to spin and rotate things,
let her put some paper in the toilet and watch how it swirls when you flush.
Instead of rejecting the idea of the potty, your child may instead take notice
and feel that the potty has a familiar element.
Erik Erikson (1902 –1988) Danish-American Developmental Psychologist
Erik Erikson |
While psychologists like von Glasersfeld and Piaget examined
how knowledge is acquired, there is a separate paradigm that looks at how
personalities and identities are formed. Erikson studied the formation of the
ego in childhood and broke it down into specific stages, each with its own
conflicts and triumphs which he theorized would lead to specific personality
traits. I won’t go into detail here about each stage of what he named the
Theory of Psychosocial Development, because what we’re mainly concerned with is
Stage 2: the Autonomy Versus Shame and Doubt stage. Erikson believed that a child reached this
stage between the approximate age of 1 and 2 years old. (Some sources broaden
the range to 18 months to 3 years). The child is discovering her own identity
and begins to fight for independence. As a parent, your role is to allow her to
do things on her own to gain self confidence. This includes allowing her to
make mistakes without fear of reprimand.
In contrast to many of the more philosophical people on this
list, Erikson actually had some concrete things to say about how his theory
related to potty training. He felt that it was a crucial example of something
to teach your child during stage 2, because using the potty is strongly linked
with a sense of pride and autonomy. Erikson stated the importance of not shaming
or punishing your child for accidents during the potty training period, because
accidents are part of the process and to put a child down will interrupt her
resolve for autonomy. The strongest tool in your psychological toolbox is your
child’s own drive to feel good about herself and to get it right. Erikson also proposed that if a child fails
to complete this stage and achieve a positive identity, it can lead to complications.
In the case of potty training, if a child reaches 3 or 4 years old with an
unhealthy sense of self, she may develop a learned helplessness in which she
refuses to use the potty.
Sigmund Freud (1856- 1939) Austrian founder of Psychoanalysis
I was hesitant to even include Freud on this list because
the scope of his opinions on elimination was daunting. But everyone knows Freud and I’d be remiss to
leave him off the list. So here goes. Freud had a lot to say on the topic of
teaching toileting, and most of it was scary. His theory of psychosexual
development suggested that elimination is linked to personality traits, much
like Erikson. But he went to extreme lengths to warn that errors made in potty
training will cause psychological disorders including, but not limited to,
sexual disorders, Oedipus complexes, and identity crises. While Freud’s work is
fundamental in the field of psychology, Freudian opinions about potty training
may amount to alarmism in the light of modern knowledge on the topic. As a result there is a lingering fear among
parents that they will damage their child by potty training incorrectly.
But what parents must understand is that Freud was responding
to the practices of his day. In the 1940’s, people trained their toddlers by
means of force, punishment, and in some cases crude practices like regular soap
enemas. No wonder if they got so messed up!
I’d love to say that all of Freud’s advice is irrelevant but let’s not
throw the baby out with the bathwater. He had some good points, the first of
which is that trauma of any kind should never get mixed in with toilet
training. If your family is undergoing a trauma or any major life event that
may cause emotional upset for your child- divorce, a new sibling, moving,
transitioning, and so on- this is not the best time to potty train. If you can
avoid it, wait until a few weeks until life has become stabilized and then try
potty training.
While I’m dubious about personality disorders like “anal
retentiveness” emerging from poor potty training methods, one has to credit
Freud for being one of the first people to prove in a clinical setting that
positive reinforcement is more effective than punishment. He was onto something that now forms the
fundamental core of potty training, which is gentle encouragement.
As long as you are using a potty training method which is
positive, gentle, and noncoercive, you need not worry
about damaging your child’s mental state or personality. If your first attempt
at potty training is gentle but unsuccessful, you may start again when your
child shows interest and you are no worse off than if you didn’t try.
B.F. Skinner (1904-1990) American psychologist and Behaviorist
Skinner was the man who invented the term “Operant
Conditioning,” a method of psychology that seeks to change a person’s behavior
by means of rewards and punishments. Because it is concerned with changing
observable behaviour instead of looking at internal psychology, the work of
behaviorists is often dismissed when it comes to child rearing. A common
criticism is that changing the behavior doesn’t solve the child’s underlying
problems or his ability to solve them.
And that may be true in many cases. After all, we want children to be
problem solvers and critical thinkers, not rats in a maze.
But a large portion of our behavior doesn’t involve thinking
at all. Most of our daily routines only involve the formation of good habits.
Trying to apply a laboured decision making process every time you get dressed,
pick up toys and brush your teeth will become exhausting. Since using the
toilet is one of these daily habits, I think it is a fantastic place to apply
Skinner’s Operant Conditioning.
Your first aim, with any form of conditioning, is to
identify your goal. This is easy. You want your child to urinate in the potty
more often and on the floor or chair less often. The stimulus for each behavior
will be the same: your child’s natural urge to eliminate and the feelings
associated with needing to go, and the child’s response will be to release.
The second rule of Operant Conditioning is observation. This
is not easily done if your child is wearing a diaper. So remove it and toss it
away. If you like, you can replace the diaper with underwear, pants or use
nothing at all. Observe your child closely at play. When he urinates on the
floor, we know from other areas of psychology that an applied punishment is not
effective or necessary. The natural consequence of urinating without a diaper
is an uncomfortable feeling and a long interruption of play to get changed.
If, however, the child uses the potty, a reward should be
applied. Praise and encouragement are appropriate, but a food reward can also
be very effective if given immediately. You do not even need to talk about the
reward or explain that it was received in exchange for using the potty. What
happens in the brain is that the treat immediately and effectively spikes a
dopamine response. This becomes connected with the part of the brain
responsible for forming habits. Eventually, deep in your child’s subconscious,
there is a part of the brain making decisions without him even knowing.
Let’s summarize the tips we can gather from developmental psychology.
1. Potty train when your child is already able to contribute
some steps to the process, but there is no need to wait until she can complete
all the steps on her own.
2. Keep the potty training method as consistent as possible
from one caregiver to another.
3. Familiarize your child with different aspects of the
potty long before you begin training.
4. When your child has accidents, look for patterns and try
to correct any underlying cause.
5. Use your child’s current interests and fixations in order
to help him assimilate potty training into what he already knows.
6. Appeal to your child’s self esteem. Never shame or punish for accidents.
7. Don’t attempt to start potty training during potentially
upsetting life events. Be careful not to traumatize your child by using force
or coercive tactics.
8. Reward your child with praise and special treats for
using the potty. Remember that accidents teach natural consequences and they
are useful for teaching as well.
As you can see, years and years of clinical observation,
applied scientific method, and volumes of complicated esoteric information can
be whittled down to simple applications, most of which you probably already
know. So if you follow the above eight recommendations and your friends ask how
you potty trained, you can proudly tell them you just applied over a century of
developmental psychology.
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