T.B.
I recently took in my friend's daughter who was asked to leave her daycare because she was a repeat offender on the biting front. We managed to nip it in the bud in about a month, but how to best deal with it depends on your daughter's personality. The daycare she went to did not do time outs for the under two set, so they separated her from the other kids and gave her one on one attention. Well to her, this was a reward, so there was no incentive to stop biting. The first thing I did was watch her like a hawk to make sure she didn't have the opportunity in the first place. (I really wanted to limit how often my own children were getting chomped on). You need to first identify the reason why she is biting. Is it territorial? Is she teething? If she is biting because she wants something the other kids have or the other children are in her personal space, you need to provide her with the words to use in these situations. I would play on the floor with the kids until I saw her get agitated, then ask her, do you want that toy? Then say, I want that toy! Can I have a turn? If another child was trying to take her toy, I taught her to say "stop, that's mine". With constant reminders of appropriate ways to say what she was feeling, she eventually got it. (There were a lot of other words I taught her also, but this would be very long if I included them all here). We also figured out she was thriving on all the negative attention when she did bite, so we simply started saying to her when it did happen, "No, biting hurts". We then promptly put her in time out for 2 minutes, while very loudly giving the victim all kinds of attention and fuss. After she was removed from time out, we had her apologize to the victim and then went on with our business like nothing happened. In the first week, she went from biting 4-5 times a day to maybe 2-3 times a week. Week two, she bit once, and then we were bite free for a week. We had a minor setback the following week with one bite, but that was the last of it. We also gave her all kinds of positive attention whenever we caught her using her words and anything else she did that we could praise. The last thing we did was completely stop talking about biting in front of her. It seemed like anytime her mom spoke about it in front of her, it reminded her to do it. Once she stopped talking about it so much, it stopped pretty quickly. She is now back in her regular daycare and hasn't bitten once. It is just a stage and it won't last forever, but the better you deal with it, the quicker it will end. If you want more explanation or information you can send me a personal message and I would be happy to share more. Good luck.