Toilet training
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Toilet training, or potty training, is the process of training a young child to use the toilet for urination and defecation. In Western countries it is usually started and completed between the ages of 12 months and three years with boys typically being at the higher end of the age spectrum.[1]
Cultural factors play a large part in what age is deemed appropriate, with the age being generally later in America[2][3].
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[edit] Modern practice
Most advise that toilet training is a mutual task, requiring cooperation, agreement and understanding between child and the caregiver, and the best potty training techniques emphasize consistency and positive reinforcement over punishment - making it fun for the child. There are articles suggesting that it is easier to toilet train a child when he/she is at least 18 months old, and for boys it is better to wait even longer since they usually lack the necessary language and fine motor skills. This time frame is much easier to use because of the child wanting to please his/her parents. [4][5][6]
[edit] Freudian psychology
Starting with Sigmund Freud,[7] many psychologists believe that toilet training is among the most formative events of the human psyche because this anal phase is the child's first introduction to the fact that social imperatives can take precedence over bodily desires,[8] and a child can have problems later in life if the toilet training does not go well, or is too strict.
For example, as an adult a person could strive for perfection or excessive cleanliness because they were too harshly trained.
Like many of Freud's original concepts, this is given much less weight by modern psychologists.
[edit] See also
- Bedwetting
- Elimination communication
- Housebreaking
- Pants Pankuro, an education animated series in Japan used to educate on toilet training
- Urinals
[edit] External links
- "Toilet Training", University of Michigan Health System
- "Toilet Training", Great Ormond Street Hospital
[edit] Footnotes and citations
- ^ Paul, Pamela. Parenting, Inc. Times (Henry Holt), 2008. ISBN 978-0-8050-8249-4. Page 244-245.
- ^ Paul, Pamela. Parenting, Inc. Times (Henry Holt), 2008. ISBN 978-0-8050-8249-4. Page 244-245.
- ^ Honig, A: "Toilet Training Stubbornness," Scholastic Parent and Child
- ^ http://familydoctor.org/online/famdocen/home/children/parents/toilet/179.printerview.html
- ^ http://www.childwelfare.gov/preventing/supporting/resources/toilettraining.cfm
- ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/parenting/your_kids/toddlers_toilettraining.shtml
- ^ The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, Vol. 11. ISBN 0-393-01128-3
- ^ Poop Culture: How America is Shaped by its Grossest National Product, ISBN 1-932-59521-X

