How to Get Chatty 2 Year Old to Sit Quietly

Updated on January 12, 2010
E.E. asks from Laurel, MD
7 answers

My son is almost 2.5 and talks from the moment he wakes up to the moment he goes to sleep at night (and then sometimes in his sleep!). It's been this way since he started to babble at a few months old. I enjoy his chatter but there are times (at church, a funeral/wedding, etc) that he needs to sit quietly. Any suggestions on how to train him at home to be able to do this? We've tried having him read books, color etc but he always babbles to himself (or us) while doing these things. Sometimes he'll do it quietly on his own but I would like him to be able to obey the command and be quiet when I want him to, not just when he decides he doesn't have a thing to say (it that makes sense). Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

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J.G.

answers from Washington DC on

I went to a workshop and the speaker told the group of preschool teachers there that we can expect to keep a child's concentration for one minute per year old and you could refocus that 3 times. So for a 2 year old it would be max 6 minutes with some wiggle time in there. That I believe is the minimum expectation. I wouldn't expect him to sit and be quiet for much longer than that.

Will you allow him to have candy....suckers? Although, my chatty 3 year old always makes noise when she is eating something she likes.

K.A.

answers from Washington DC on

Maybe you could teach him to whisper. Some kids are just chatty. It's a great sign of intelligence! How wonderful! Don't know how easy it is to change a leopard's spots... Good luck and hope you enjoy the ever so brief time you have with their childhood!

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R.M.

answers from Washington DC on

Sometimes you just have to accept your child for who they are and accept that there are some things you can't change. I have 3 chatty kids (now 21, 18 and 8)and my husband and I - and extended family - tried everything to get them to be quiet. My brother-in-law used to try to bride the older two - sometimes as much as $10 if they could be quiet for 5 minutes - neither of them ever made it (LOL)!! As they have gotten older, of course, they have better control, but there are still times all three talk at me at once and expect me to respond to all of them. As much as it tires my ears I have friends who are jealous that my college age kids want to talk to me on a daily basis and tell me about just about everything. Just wait until he learns to text!:)

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K.H.

answers from Washington DC on

You could try a reward chart , have him sit quietly for a minute and if he manages it then give him a sticker on the chart , gradually increase the amount of time by a minute and then when he reaches say 10 stickers give him a little reward and explain it's because he was so good at sitting quietly when you asked him to , my kids respond well to reward charts as they know they are working towards something.

Good luck

K.

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K.F.

answers from Washington DC on

Wow...your ears must be tired! :) When my daughter was a toddler she used to have an issue sitting quietly at church as well, so my MIL bribed her with gum and that usually worked. Good luck!!

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L.R.

answers from Washington DC on

It is actually fantastic that he is chatty. This shows he's a highly verbal child and all his talking only helps develop his verbal sense. As the mom of a child who also was talkative and is now in third grade and great to talk with, believe me, you will be so glad that he is well on the way to being able to articulate his thoughts, needs and wants to you -- it's far preferable to having to drag everything out of him or struggle to understand his wants. So try to be positive about his chattiness.

Yes, you don't want him chatting constantly in public, but I agree with another poster who said your expectations are perhaps unrealistic for his age. Having him "obey the command" as you put it is outside his reach right now, and if you treat this like he's misbehaving, he could see that as mom and dad showing they don't care what he has to say, even though you know you're really only trying to teach him boundaries. Boundaries are important, but at his age, he just finds the world too interesting not to start sharing it verbally with you or talking about it to himself. As for training him at home to be quiet in other places, imagine his mind when he gets to those other places that aren't home -- it's all so interesting, so different, that his home lessons will go out the window because he's somewhere new.

So yes, take plenty of stuff for him to do, like you already are, but remove him from the event or service if he gets too chatty.

As for special events: Does he really need to attend weddings or funerals, etc., where his chatting gets in the way of adults' participating? Can you get a babysitter for those kinds of once-in-a-lifetime events that are really designed for adults anyway?

As for church: Does he really need to be in the main church service or is there a "children's church" or kids' Sunday school during adult worship he can attend,where he'd actually get more out of it? If there isn't -- I'd bet other parents at your church would be thrilled to participate if you suggested starting such an arragement, with parents taking turns shepherding the kids so the parents get chances to be in the main worship service regularly. (The solution at our church: The younger kids are present through the first 15-20 minutes of worship, then after the children's sermon, go to a classroom for age-appropriate activities for the rest of the service. That way they get the experience of being in "big church" but also get age-appropriate, fun lessons, while the adults are able to concentrate on the sermon. The elementary-age kids usually participate in the adult worship service but sometimes go off to help with the younger ones.)

It can drive us adults crazy, the chattiness, but it beats crying, whining or, even worse really, silence. Like eating or using the potty, talking is one thing HE can control and you can't, and he's at an age when he wants and needs some kind of control. Don't make this a huge battle with him but instead use distraction, occupation and if needed, removal. Good luck.

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C.J.

answers from Washington DC on

my daughter is fantastic in places like concerts and movies, libraries and museums but i still don't expect her to sit in church for an hour with me. i used to take her to the church nursery and now she attends the preschool. you expectations may be a little unrealistic.

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