At what age did your child start playing in his or her room?
My son is 3 1/2 and I so badly want him to play in his room but he won't listen to me. He'll go in there and kick and scream or he'll go in there for a second and keep popping out to come bug me. It doesn't matter what I'm doing. He has tons of cool toys in his room but he doesn't care. He just wants to bug me I guess.
2009-03-14T10:25:36Z
My friend has children who are 8, 4, and 1 and they all play in the room. I don't know if they just like being together or if she makes them or what.
2009-03-14T10:43:43Z
We live in a small town pretty much in the middle of nowhere so not many people come over and there aren't many kids in the town and most of them go to school. He has a little brother so he's not by himself.
samariatimms@ymail.com2009-03-14T10:20:26Z
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as annoying as it is, he's a mommas boy. my daughter started playing in her room about 2 she likes to bring her toys out but i tell her if she wants to play with them keep them in her room and play. some kids just like to be close to their parents and are very clingy. try giving him a color book and colors in the room your in so he'll keep busy and not bother you.
He needs to be around you for a few more years yet - the change to playing alone will be gradual - at 31/2 maybe 10 minutes is as long as it will get. Look at it this way - he needs to be around older people to learn how to speak and do things. But at 31/2 he should be happy to be around other people besides you - maybe a pre school or playgroup. Perhaps a neighbours older child would come and play for a while after school? Just enjoy his company, he'll grow up only too quickly
Hmm, bug you. Maybe he's bored. It's not so fun playing in your room by yourself. He should be able to entertain himself for a little while by now, but not for long periods. Maybe you could play with him for a while in his room, show him how cool his toys are. Then when he gets engrossed in something, you can say that you have to go run an errand in the other room real quick. Maybe you could have some playdates at your house. I'm sure he'd stay in his room for hours if there was another little boy to play with.
Set a timer and tell him it's personal private time. When the timer goes off, he can come out. There's a good chance your son doesn't know HOW to play by himself because he's never had to. t's a very important skill for him to learn. He needs to be taught to engage in creative play and once he learns to play creatively, he'll slowly learn to play alone. Make sure he knows he can look at books, do puzzles, build with blocks, whatever he'd like. We used to give my niece and nephew personal private time. When my nephew was 3, we put a gate at the door so he couldn't get out, but the door was still open and we knew he was safe. We'd set the timer for fifteen or twenty minutes and let him play by himself. It worked for us really well. But, your son may throw fits at first, so you may need to develop a reward chart of some type.