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A few years ago, when touring various preschools for my daughter, I visited one where I had the chance to observe the kids playing on the playground. While climbing the ladder on the slide, one little boy accidentally stepped on a little girl’s finger, and she started crying. What happened next left me astounded.


The boy, who was 3, went up to the girl, looked her in the eye and asked, “Are you OK? Can I get you a wet towel?”

She wiped her tears, shook her head no, and they both went back to playing.

I looked at the preschool director, like, uh, what was that?

“We don’t make kids say ‘sorry,’” she explained. “The word doesn’t mean much without an action to help make things better.”


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The exchange was such a departure from what I was used to seeing among parents, who tend to force apologies from their children for every accidental bump, whack and knock-down of a just-built Lego masterpiece. Usually, they’ll give the kid a stern look, and ask, “Hey, what do you say?” Then, when the child mutters a robotic “sorry,” all is good! Manners! We’re teaching them!

But this approach might be mostly meaningless, writes Heather Shumaker in her book It’s OK Not to Share and Other Renegade Rules for Raising Competent and Compassionate Kids. Children love the word “sorry,” Shumaker explains, as it magically lets them off the hook. “It’s a little like teaching kids to be hit-and-run drivers,” she writes. The problem with the “sorry” solution is that many young children—say, preschool age—haven’t reached a stage of moral development to actually feel sorry, so parents are missing a key opportunity to teach real empathy.

Shumaker writes:



Young kids sometimes fool us. They can mimic “Sorry” and even cry when another child cries, but most children are not capable of being sorry yet. Children differ—you may have an early bloomer—but most children simply lack the emotional and cognitive development to feel remorse. Remorse requires the ability to take another person’s perspective and fully understand cause and effect. These skills are still emerging in young children. Expecting young kids to say “Sorry” teaches them nothing more than a misguided lesson in sequence: kick, say “Sorry,” move on.


Instead, parents can help kids develop moral compassion by explaining that their actions have consequences, showing that they can do something to make things better and modeling ways to use the word “sorry” meaningfully.


For everyday accidents, Shumaker offers these steps:

Bring the kids together

Sometimes, when children believe they’re about to be in trouble, they run, Shumaker explains. If this happens, you can put an arm around the child, and say something like, “You need to come back here. Callie got hurt. Even if you didn’t mean to do it, she got hurt, and you need to come back.”


Tell the child who caused the accident what happened, and be specific

Even when what happened seems obvious, it needs to be pointed out to a young child. State the facts. “Your shopping cart ran over her toe.” “Your hand knocked the cup of water onto her painting.” “You were dancing and your arm whacked her face.”


Describe what you see

Examining the facts of the scene helps kids develop empathy. Emphasize the consequences of their actions for the other child (or adult), and be specific: “Look, he’s crying. There’s a scratch on his arm. It must hurt.”


Model empathy for the hurt child

Ask the child: “Are you OK?”

Take action

While little kids may not fully understand remorse, the book explains, they are good at taking action. They can run to grab a Band-Aid or an ice pack, or help clean up the mess they made. Help them take responsibility.


Make a guarantee

Shumaker writes, “Reassurance that it won’t happen again means something. ‘Sorry’ does not.” To reestablish trust among the kids, she writes, have the child who caused the accident make a guarantee to the other child that she won’t do it again. You can ask, “Are you going to hit him again?” or have her say the words, “I won’t hit you again.”




Model saying “sorry” in your own life

Eventually, we do want kids to say “sorry.” But instead of making them say “sorry,” Shumaker writes that it’s more effective to model saying sorry when you as a parent screw up. Just make sure your own apologies are meaningful. That means acknowledging the consequences of your actions and taking steps to make things better. For example: “I’m sorry I forgot to bring your teddy bear to school day. You missed him during nap time. I’m writing it down on my list so I will remember next time.”



Soon, kids say “sorry” without prompting, and they’ll really mean it.


This story was originally published in 2017 and updated with new information on 2/11/2020.