"My child is an animal," she jokes.
"He's never met a utensil he likes. He eats with his hands."
City officials realized that Real was not
the only parent worried about sending an unmannered child out into the
increasingly yuppified world of Manhattan Beach, which has seen a recent
influx of entertainment and Internet money. So they created what they say
no other Los Angeles area municipality has: city-sponsored etiquette classes
for children.
The youngsters are taught which fork to
use when, how to ask on the telephone to speak with a friend, how to shake
hands during an introduction, the proper way to walk and sit down, and
how to listen to others.
All that is proving increasingly popular
since the program began three years ago. The 11 summer sessions, each with
a total of six hours of class time, are nearly filled and more are planned
for the fall. Parents pay approx. $70.00 - about the same as for a city-sponsered
art class.
"Parents are very concerned that their
children have proper manners," said Idris J. Al-Oboudi, recreation services
manager for Manhattan Beach. Al-Oboudi said he got the idea for the
classes after seeing a television program about children's etiquette three
years ago. In a success-oriented community such as Manhattan Beach, or
indeed, any community, manners classes should be just as available in the
summer as science classes or sea kayaking clinics, he said.
"This helps them know what to do, how to
do it and why to do it. You don't get a second chance at first impressions,"
Al Oboudi said. "In the modern communities we live in today, sometimes
we tend to forget these things. If you learn these skills, you will be
able to hit it off with your teachers, with your counselors and express
yourself much better."
Real agreed, "I love it. I love that we're
that cultured in Manhattan Beach," she said recently, peeking in the window
of the tiny classroom in Manhattan Heights Park where Joey and 15 boys
and girls younger than 10 were reviewing the proper techniques for buttering
and eating a dinner roll.
Inside, 8-year-old Sarah Strickley clutched
her mouth with both hands, her eyes wide with horror.
After politely offering bread to the girls
seated on either side of her, Sarah had jerked the plate up too quickly,
sending an errant roll bouncing onto the table and then -- as all three
girls gasped -- onto the floor.
Their instructor, Maggie O'Farrill, took
it in stride. After all, she noted, one of the ironclad rules of etiquette
is that it is impolite to publicly correct others' behavioral lapses, although
you may silently judge them.
O'Farrill knows her manners; it's her family
business. Her mother, Margarita O'Farrill, had one of the first Spanish
language etiquette shows in Los Angeles, and her brother and sister are
etiquette teachers. This summer, she is assisted by her son, Bryan, 22.
Her most important lesson, O'Farrill said,
is for the children to treat other people well. "Behind all etiquette is
the golden rule," she said.
But many parents said they put their children
in the classes not only to do unto others, but also to help themselves.
"I think it's really important to know
manners and etiquette," said Helen Griffin, who enrolled her 8-year-old
son after she noticed him wiping his mouth on his sleeves. "My husband
thinks I'm crazy... but first impressions are so important, especially
for college and professional years."
Many children politely concurred, at least
in front of their teacher, as they chomped on chocolate cake while learning
the proper method of using a fork to cut soft foods. (A few parents confided
that they had to bribe the children with Nintendo games to get them in
the door on the first day.)
"I'm learning better manners," said Kimberly
Olson, 8, delicately swabbing at a hunk of frosting on her chin. "It's
important to put your napkin on your lap."
To sweeten the etiquette lessons, children
have eaten waffles, sweet cereal and orange juice--stand-ins for finer
dining options of steak, soup and sparkling water.

This combination of sweets and sensible
instruction works well with children, O'Farrill said.
Children don't always listen to their parents'
attempts to instill proper manners; it's easier to hear it from a teacher
and in a group, she said. In addition, many parents themselves may not
know what fork to use and which person to introduce first. That leads O'Farrill
to stress another rule: She tells the children not to go home and berate
their parents for improper manners.
Nevertheless, some children have been unable
to resist, parents said.
Meg Borcia, who works as a ticket agent
for Northwest Airlines at Los Angeles International Airport, said she is
victimized by the general public's lack of etiquette on a daily basis.
Recently, she has been receiving a steady stream of table-setting tips
from her two children, both enrolled in O'Farrill's classes.
She doesn't mind. Her children, she said,
tend to tune her out when she corrects their manners, Borcia said. Yet,
when O'Farrill complimented her son's waffle-cutting skills, he came home
delighted.
"I think having good manners makes them
feel like they're respected," Borcia said.
However, her son has cautioned her not
to expect a complete change in behavior. "He told me", You know, Mom, just
because I learn it here doesn't mean I'm going to use it at home,'" she
said.
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