What is NOT Appropriate Sexual Development in Early Childhood.by Megan Bayliss | More from this Blogger 29 Sep 2006 03:17 PM
Amber light behaviors: Parents and teachers need to be concerned if any of the following behaviors are evident on an ongoing basis. Just like the indicators of sexual abuse, one amber light behavior is insufficient to cause great worry. More than one however, especially if occurring regularly over a period of more than six months, needs careful attention, intervention and is worthy of you talking to a person who has some professional knowledge in the area. • A preoccupation with sexual behavior such as masturbation. • The continually pulling down of another child's pants, or, lifting up of girls skirts. This is a coercive behavior and is not about individual sexual development. • Explicit conversation about sexuality and sex. How does the child know such explicit concepts? • Sexual graffiti or the drawing of sexual parts. • The engagement with another child in mutual masturbation (This is quite different to show me yours/mine). • Simulating foreplay or sexual behavior in doll play. Red light behaviors: Parents and teachers need to become immediately concerned if any of the following behaviors occur. These behaviors will usually occur in a sneaky manner and often when the child is alone. This is a marked difference from the group type behaviors already looked at as belonging to normal sexual development. If you recognize any of the following, you need to seek immediate help from counselors, welfare bodies or even the police. • Chronic peeping behavior, particularly if the peeping occurs while the child is on their own. • Following other children into the toilet to look at them. This is different to the group mentality of looking under toilet doors at school. That behavior is driven by age appropriate group skill development and is fueled by dares and a desire to belong to a group. Individual and consistent toilet looking is a sign of something different developing. • Touching the genitals of any other children, not just their current peers. • The writing of a sexually threatening note to another child. • Penetration of any kind with any type of object - finger, peg, pen, toy, penis. Normal sexual development sometimes involves looking and touching but never penetration. • Force to involve another person (this includes verbal threats). • Sexual behavior that is not consensual between both children. • An older child coercing a younger child, or any child coercing a child with an intellectual disability (whether they be younger, the same or older). • A male child that forces a female child. Sexual development is a normal, accepted stage of our growth. Abusive, coercive and secret sexual behaviors are not normal, developmentally appropriate or acceptable. Please seek immediate help for your child if you are concerned. Seeking help does not mean you are a bad parent, instead, it means that you are concerned and are willing to act and protect - the sign of a great parent. My FAVORITE child focused article of the day: Positive Identity by Valerie Nelson Relevantparenting tags User Comments dpenna (542) 29 Sep 2006 05:23 PMThis is great information. Not long ago, my daughter had a friend over. I found out later that the girl coerced my daughter into pulling her shorts down and letting her friend touch her, using threatening words. My daughter (then 5) didn't fully understand that it was wrong, and did it because of what the other little girl said to her. I was appalled and saddened, and needless to say, that little girl was never allowed near my daughter again. Her fosters parents were lucky I didn't call police, because I'm almost certain that foster child was a victim at some point. Megan Bayliss (3586) 29 Sep 2006 05:47 PMThank goodness your daughter told you Diane. Well done to you, and her, for being able to discuss it. You have done the right thing to halt contact. Parents need to stop putting their kids at risk. Don't forget though, if you want to report, you still can. That other little girl may well be a victim and require help to stop acting out her own sexalised behavior. Congratulations to you Diana for protecting your child. Mxx Discuss this article
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