Between the ages of three and five, your child is not a toddler and not yet at school. Stuck in the middle, preschoolers still have the innocent charm of babies, while being determined to show the world that they are their own person.

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For FathersIn between making sure everybody knows they’re not a baby and amusing everyone with hilarious combinations of new words and expressions, preschoolers are watching and listening. This is one of the most important periods in a child’s emotional development.
The foundations for confidence and self-esteem are established during this time. The way a child feels about his own rapidly blossoming abilities and the way he deals with more complex emotions have a huge influence on his ability to cope with life’s stresses.
The role of a parent during the preschooler years changes dramatically. Suddenly, the bub who made sweet gurgling noises and laughed at funny faces is asking questions you can’t answer and telling strangers things you were sure you whispered in private.
Your baby is a little person ready to take on the world and your job is to show him how. Since school hasn’t started yet, most of your preschooler’s learning will occur through play. This will happen at home and at preschool or kindergarten with other children, where children are encouraged to learn through play, art and storytelling.
One of your most important jobs during this time is helping your child to handle emotions and develop social skills. The development of these skills helps your child to cope with emotional changes, keep going in the face of frustration, have hope, control extreme emotional impulses and feel compassion and empathy. They are very important ingredients for success in life.
Good self-esteem means that you have a positive view of yourself and your abilities. Children who have good self-esteem feel that their parents think well of them and they can manage the world to some degree.
If you have good self-esteem, it affects the way you approach tasks and learning and the way you deal with life’s disappointments and problems. Positive self-esteem helps us to understand and accept failure without lasting emotional damage. It makes us less likely to say, ‘Of course that bad thing happened to me, my life is a disaster and I’m a bad person’, and more likely to say, ‘What can I do to fix that bad thing that happened to me?’ or 'Bad things happen to everyone. I can get over this'.
For more information on building self-esteem in children, read our article Building good family relationships
Optimism is the ability to look on the bright side of life, even when things are going wrong. Having an optimistic view of life helps you to think positively rather than negatively and understand the causes of things that happen to you. There is increasing evidence that an optimistic view on life can make it easier to deal with life when things go badly.
You can encourage your child to have an optimistic outlook on life by helping him to:
Good coping skills help us to deal with the problems, frustrations, threats and challenges that life throws at us. The way a child deals with these things as a baby and toddler – crying and tantrums – don’t go down very well in later childhood or in the office (even though they are still commonly used!).
Preschoolers tend to ‘cope’ or deal with threatening situations through symbolic play – they create a make-believe situation where they can defeat whatever is frightening them. In this way, your child makes himself feel better by acting out control over a frightening situation. Older children may find it more comforting if you can explain what’s going on in a frightening situation.
You can help promote good coping skills in your child in the following ways:
Problem-solving skills are important for decision making and sorting out conflicts. Through conflict, children learn that people experience different thoughts and feelings and learn the difference between right and wrong. They also learn about how their behaviour affects other people. To help your child develop good problem-solving skills:
Having good relationships with a range of people is very important for a person’s mental health. To develop these relationships, children must learn social skills, such as:
Developing social skills is like any other skill. Children need to practise them, especially since this combination of skills can be quite complex. Sometimes children have no trouble learning some skills and yet struggle with others. Practising these skills helps them to become socially competent – they will be able to make and keep friends and maintain satisfying relationships.
Children of different ages, backgrounds and personalities experience different difficulties in learning social skills. Preschool children often encounter difficulties in controlling impulses – they can find it very hard to take turns, negotiate difficult situations and resolve conflict. Older children may suffer from shyness or feel as though they don’t fit in.
Mums and dads tend to have the most influence on how a child’s social skills develop, but children learn also from a range of sources including family members, friends, day care and preschool. Unfortunately there’s no recipe for teaching social skills – you have to take into account individual differences because what works for one child may not work for another. It’s often a case of trial and error, watching how different things work with your child.
To help your child develop good social skills, consider the following:
When your child starts school, social skills can be helped along with games that involve winning and losing (such as ‘snap’, ‘snakes and ladders’), participating in family trips and outings, and encouraging participation in sport and group activities.
Zaff, J., & Hair, E. (2002). Positive development of the self: Self-concept, self-esteem, and identity. In M. H. Bornstein, L. Davidson, C. L. M. Keyes & K. A. Moore (Eds.), Well-being: Positive development across the life course (pp. 235-251). New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum.