I've Got Potty Power! - - Watch the #1 Potty Training Program

Harmony Square - Educational Videos & Activities
Harmony Square - Educational Videos & Activities
27.5 هزار بار بازدید - 5 سال پیش - You've got Potty Power if
You've got Potty Power if you can go to the potty all by yourself! Sing along if you're a Big Kid!  Visit our website for free potty training resources. Make Potty Training enjoyable for everyone.

Potty Power Academy is a series of fun potty training videos that introduce children to potty training and keep them interested in the process until they are trained. Potty Power is fun, entertaining and upbeat. That’s why it works. Plenty of toddlers and a 3-D animated friend guide your child through the potty training process and teach kids what it takes to be potty trained. Toddlers become responsible for using the potty themselves because they have Potty Power!

Say good-bye to diapers! Potty Power will motivate your toddler to use the potty! The program is cleverly produced to initiate and then sustain your child’s interest in potty training. The program focuses on what your child needs to know to develop the responsibility to use the potty him or herself!

Toilet training (also potty training or toilet learning) is the process of training someone, particularly a young child or infant, to use the toilet for urination and defecation. Little is known about toilet training in pre-modern societies, but attitudes toward training in recent history have fluctuated substantially, and may vary across cultures and according to demographics. Many the contemporary approaches to toilet training favor a behavioralism- and cognitive psychology-based approach.

Specific recommendations on techniques vary considerably, although a range of these are generally considered effective, and specific research on their comparative effectiveness is lacking. No single approach may be universally effective, either across learners or for the same learner across time, and trainers may need to adjust their techniques according to what is most effective in their situation. Training may begin shortly after birth in some cultures. However, in much of the developed world this occurs between the age of 18 months and two years, with the majority of children fully trained by age four, although many children may still experience occasional accidents.

Certain behavioral or medical disorders may affect toilet training, and extend the time and effort necessary for successful completion. In certain circumstances, these will require professional intervention by a medical professional. However, this is rare and even for those children who face difficulties in training, the vast majority of children can be successfully trained.

Children may face certain risks associated with training, such as slips or falling toilet seats, and toilet training may act in some circumstances as a trigger for abuse. Certain technologies have been developed for use in toilet training, some specialized and others commonly used.

Little is known about toilet training in pre-modern societies. Ancient Rome has been credited with the earliest known children's toilet. However, there is no evidence of what training techniques they may have employed. Later, during the European Middle Ages, according to one source "Recommended cures for 'pyssying the bedde'...included consumption of ground hedgehog or powdered goat claw and having dried rooster combs sprinkled on the bed."

Cultural beliefs and practices related to toilet training in recent times have varied. For example, beginning in the late 18th century parenting transitioned from the use of leaves or linens (or nothing) for the covering of a child's genitals, to the use of cloth diapers (or nappies), which needed to be washed by hand. This was followed by the advent of mechanical washing machines, and then to the popularization of disposable diapers in the mid 20th century, each of which decreased the burden on parental time and resources needed to care for children who were not toilet trained, and helped to relax expectations about the timeliness of training. This trend did not manifest equally in all parts of the world. Those living in poorer countries may still face increased pressure to train as early as possible, as access to amenities such as disposable diapers may still pose a significant burden. Poorer families in developed countries also tend to train earlier than their more affluent peers.

Much of the 20th-century conceptualization of toilet training was dominated by psychoanalysis, with its emphasis on the unconscious, and warnings about potential psychological impacts in later life of toilet training experiences.
5 سال پیش در تاریخ 1398/04/17 منتشر شده است.
27,549 بـار بازدید شده
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