Wellbeing
Miss Lisa Mann | Wellbeing Coordinator
Wellbeing
Miss Lisa Mann | Wellbeing Coordinator
Winnie the Pooh once said that;
“a day without a friend is like a pot without a single drop of honey left inside,”
and my bet is that when he said this, he wasn’t talking about any friend, he was talking about a good friend.
Being a good friend and knowing what a good friend entails is an integral component of friendship. Research says that kids start making meaningful friendships from around the age of four and from that point onwards, friendships will contribute to their wellbeing, learning, confidence and mental health.
Here are some strategies you can use to help explain what being a good friend means to your child and how they can be one.
While most adults know instinctively what a good friend is, explaining this to kids can be difficult, says Reach Out’s Online Community Coordinator Janine Nelson. Pinpointing some of those elements of what being a good friend means can be a great way to start.
For example, “being a good friend means including concepts of respect, loyalty, providing support and having fun together“, Nelson explains.
“Good friends typically display behaviours such as being trustworthy, someone who is around for the hard times, not just the good times, and someone you can laugh with. Good friends respect your boundaries, and make you feel comfortable being yourself.”
Healthy Harold and the team at Life Education add that “generally, being a good friend involves loyalty, empathy and trust. A good friend would listen, be an upstander instead of a bystander, be forgiving, be patient, and respect your opinion. They are empathetic and able to put themselves in your situation.”
It is also critical for kids to know that a good friend can be different for different people and that what we view as a good friend can change over time and as we grow.
“As kids grow older, it’s important to help them understand that there are many different types of friends and that these relationships can change over time,” says Nelson.
Helping your kids understand that this is normal and that it doesn’t equate to failure, while also supporting them through these changes is important.
Life Education says that helping your kids understand what specific values are associated with friendship is key to understanding what a good friend looks like and how to be one.
“Friendship values include being a loyal friend, accepting differences in a friend, standing up for a friend, being kind and supportive to a friend and including a friend in games,” they explain.
While knowledge and values are key underpinnings, consolidating these with skills is the next step. Life Education suggests you “explain to your child that just as they can get better at swimming by practising, they can also get better at making and keeping friends by practising social skills such as smiling and greeting classmates, sharing, cooperating, negotiating, being positive, having an interesting conversation, playing games well (e.g., being a good winner and loser).”
Provide positive feedback when you observe your child using social skills or values that have the potential to contribute to the development of their friendships. This will help reinforce the values that make a good friend.
Don’t always try to fix every problem that arises, be present and support the children as they try to find a resolution. Create an environment where no questions are off-limits so that nothing is too uncomfortable to discuss.
Helping your child understand the distinction between being a friend and being a good friend is important but supporting them to become one can be a tricky process. It can vary depending on you, your child/ren, the friendships and over time. Experiment with different strategies and techniques and see what works best for you and your child/ren.
Mrs Lisa Mann | Wellbeing