Parenting

Teacher reveals the one thing she wishes all parents taught their kids before kindergarten: ‘It’s really hard to help them learn’

Now, here’s a parenting tip moms and dads oughta “No!.”

Emily Perkins, 28, a kindergarten teacher from Kentucky, is schooling parents on the art of saying “uh-uh” before their little rascal’s first day of school. 

“Tell your child ‘No,’” in a buzzy bulletin with over 326,000 TikTok views. 

Perkins virally scolded “gentle” moms and dads who refuse to tell their kids “No” for fear of triggering negative emotions. Krakenimages.com – stock.adobe.com

“Tell them ‘No’ as a complete sentence,” she urged, insisting that a homespun lesson in denial is the best way to prepare a tot for the classroom. “Do not teach them that telling them ‘No’ invites them to argue with you.”

Perkins assures that issuing a veto isn’t about being repressive. Instead, it’s about teaching tikes respect. 

“If I can’t tell your child ‘No’ as an adult, and they don’t respect the ‘No,’” she said, “they’re basically unteachable.”

It’s a piercing word-to-the-wise aimed directly at mothers and fathers of the “gentle parenting” persuasion. The folks who’d rather let their kids run amok than reprimand them with tough love. 

Gentle parenting emphasizes a child’s thoughts, needs and feelings over rules, restrictions and punishments. JenkoAtaman – stock.adobe.com
Perkins says kids who aren’t taught to respect an adult’s instructions are virtually “unteachable” at school. Getty Images
Gentle parents often avoid yelling, giving time outs and spankings. pikselstock – stock.adobe.com

Gentle parenting is bringing-up-baby style that prioritizes empathy, understanding, independence and boundaries. It’s an ultramodern form of child-rearing that comes in stark contrast to the more traditional punishment-and-reward, “spare the rod, spoil the child” ideologies of yore.

The little hellions of gentle parents are often permitted to do as they please — scream, holler, hit, terrorize and vandalize — sans repercussion.  

Kelly Medina Enos, 34, doesn’t even instruct her five-year-old son, George, to say “sorry,” when he misbehaves. To the millennial mom of two, from the UK, making him apologize — even after he “smacks” her —  is “disingenuous.”

Perkins says parents who are opposed to using the word “No” should homeschool their little terrors. Krakenimages.com – stock.adobe.com

To Perkins, the gentle parenting trend is nothing but a nightmare. 

“Congratulations, you’re a pushover,” the teacher and mother of two scoffed in her viral rebuke. “You can validate your child’s feelings without being a pushover.”

“I had a parent tell me that they don’t tell their child ‘No’ because it triggers them,” she said with a deep sigh. 

No. No no no. No.

“If you want to have a kid who you can’t tell ‘No,’ and you don’t want to use the word ‘No’ in your vocabulary [and] you want to be able to tell them ‘No’ and then they argue with you immediately — teach your own kids,” Perkins ranted. 

“Teach your own kids,” she reiterated. 

“If your child’s teacher can’t tell them ‘No,’” said Perkins, “it’s really hard to help them learn.”