Showing posts with label student stress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student stress. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Parents of Elementary and Middle School students and Homework: What Is Your Role?

Check out this Challenge Success Webinar


Start the second half of the school year off right! Each week we hear from parents around the country that homework is hazardous to their family life. We're here to help. This Friday, January 30th, Dr. Denise Pope will host our first webinar on homework. 

Many parents struggle at least occasionally, and sometimes regularly, with their child over homework. Learn why the dynamics of homework have changed in recent years, what you can do to minimize homework stress, and how to help make homework time more positive for you and your child.

This presentation will provide you with:

  • Information on the latest trends and research on homework
  • Ideas for how best to support your child’s homework efforts
  • Tips for how to communicate and collaborate effectively with teachers about homework
Target Audience: Parents of elementary and middle school students

This is our most requested presentation topic each year. Friday's webinar allows us to share this important content with parents and communities that we can't always reach in person. Get in on our introductory rate of $19/person. Please Note: there is a limit of 100 participants for this webinar. Reserve your ticket now. 
 

Sign-up for the Webinar!
Friday, January 30, 2015
12:30-2:00 pm PST
Introductory Price: $19/person

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

The Three Most Important Questions You Can Ask Your Teenager



by Michael Mulligan
from The Huffington Post
12/2/14
Read the whole article here.

Here are some quotes from the article:

"We have raised a generation that is plagued with insecurity, anxiety and despair.

...this generation of highly accomplished, college-bound students have been robbed of their independence because they have been raised in a petri dish for one purpose only: to attend an elite college that ensures their and their families' economic and social status. Instead of being nurtured towards real curiosity and a genuine sense of citizenship, these millennials are conditioned to think that everything they do is for the purpose of looking good in the eyes of admissions officers and employers: you earn good grades not because they mean you are learning something, but rather because they will help you stand out from your peers when applying to the Ivies. You engage in community service not because you wish genuinely to make a positive difference in the lives of others but rather because that is how you burnish your resume -- service as check-off box. You play sports not because they build character and teamwork and are a whole lot of fun, but because you want to try to get recruited for a college team. You study art or music not because you wish to refine your understanding of human nature, creativity and culture but because it will help you look smarter.

Many college students who fall apart under pressure because they cannot conceive of the fact that hard work and learning are positive outcomes in and of themselves. They have no sense of who they are or what is important in their lives. They have spent so much time trying to look good that they do not know what "The Good" (consider Plato here) really is.

We have raised a generation of kids who are taught that appearance is more important than substance and that outcomes are more important than character. As a result, they inhabit empty vessels that lead them to a series of negative behaviors that results in, yes, unhappiness, which they try erase with empty sex, drugs, alcohol...

...stop asking What (What grade did you get? What team did you make?) 
and begin asking Who, Where, and How?
  • Who tells us who we are?
  • Where do we want to go with our lives?
  • How do we want to get there?"
Read the whole article here.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Wanting the Best, or Needing to Be the Best?


I'm reprinting an article entitled,

Harvard, Schmarvard; Why Getting Your Kids Into College Should Be the Least of Your Concerns
by Michelle Rose Gilman
9/28/14
Huff Post Parents


"It's almost that time of year. I can feel it in the fall air and see it on the faces of parents and seniors everywhere. It's almost college application time and the race begins, as parents and kids vie for the chance to get into their first choice colleges.

For some parents, college acceptance approaches the culmination of every single parenting choice ever made. It can seem the ultimate goal, the ROI of parenthood, the final gold award and the epitome of a parenting job well done. It feels like the end game for every AP class, honors class, volunteer opportunity, and sports involvement that you required of your child. This college acceptance looms as the justification for the hours upon hours of helping with homework, rewriting their essays, doing most of their science fair projects since sixth grade, hiring the most expensive college counselor, and pushing, pushing, pushing your kids to get the A at any cost. "My child got into his first choice university" will be worn proudly and loudly as a testament to how well you have done as mom and dad.

I'm just being honest. I have been hacking into your lives for the past 25 years as a founder and head of school at a private school in California. If you are finding yourself already getting annoyed or a little angry with me, I ask you to hear me out. I was once where you are now, until my son decided on a much different path and forced me to rethink the whole process and what constituted my achievement as a parent. It was not college acceptance."

Read the rest HERE

Please feel free to leave a comment.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Denise Pope speaks at Parenting Conference



Denise Pope of Challenge Success will be the keynote speaker at this year's:

San Ramon Valley Council of PTAs      srvc header

Parenting Conf 2014 graphic

Parenting 2014 & Beyond...


 Annual Parenting Conference


This year’s keynote speaker, Denise Pope, Ph.D., will talk about "Striving for Balance: Strategies to raise resilient kids in a fast-paced world." 
Denise Pope, Ph.D., is a Senior Lecturer at the Stanford University School of Education. For the past fourteen years, she has specialized in student engagement, curriculum studies, qualitative research methods, and service learning. She is co-founder of Challenge Success, a research and intervention project that provides schools and families the tools they need to raise healthy, motivated students.  She lectures nationally on parenting techniques and pedagogical strategies to increase student well-being, engagement with learning, and integrity.  
After the keynote presentation, participants will have the opportunity to attend their choice of a morning and an afternoon small-group seminar, focusing on a variety of current parenting topics. Detailed descriptions of the seminars are on the registration page and can also be found here.
$45 registration includes the keynote, two seminars, continental breakfast, and lunch. 
I've heard Denise speak many times and highly recommend going to this conference to hear her message.  I've taken her parenting class at Stanford, I believe in Challenge Success and what they promote about reducing student stress and finding family balance.  If you can't attend for the whole day, but can be there for her keynote address, please do so! 

Saturday March 8, 2014 8:30 AM - 2:30 PM PST
Add to Calendar

WhereDougherty Valley High School
10550 Albion Rd
San Ramon, CA 94582

Detailed descriptions of the seminars are on the registration page and can be found here.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Yoga = Less Stressed Out Children & Adults




Guest Blog by Nicole DeAvilla


We hear a lot these days about the toll stress takes on our children and ourselves.  Many of the leading diseases that plague our culture today are related to stress: diabetes, obesity, heart disease, depression and more.  On the other hand there is a growing amount of scientific evidence that shows how yoga reverses the negative effects of stress and can   mitigate many of the effects of stress related illnesses.

You might be thinking… sounds good but how could I ever get my tween or teen to slow down and do some yoga – my child has ADHD, my child has no time for anything else in her schedule… is it “cool” enough?  I think Yoga would be too difficult for me even if I had the time to practice it…

Let’s look at the science.  While exercise can also help to reduce stress, yoga additionally incorporates breathing exercises, positive attitudes and concentration skills that apparently add up to additional benefits.

Yoga literally increases grey matter in the brain, especially in the prefrontal lobes (executive function, concentration, will power, happy moods etc.) and in the part of the brain that makes us feel connected (feeling connected to the world around you – the environment, friends, family etc.).  It decreases the activity in the back part of the brain, which is associated with impulsive behavior, worry, fear, addiction etc.

Yoga helps with managing emotions, feeling more connected and focused and with ADHD.  And what’s the side effect?  - Increased levels of dopamine, a hormone, which makes us feel happy.  That’s a side effect I can live with!

If you or your child had more executive function skills, focus and felt happier, less worried, distracted and impulsive – would there be more time left over in the day after work, school, home work, chores and family time to practice a few minutes of yoga daily – either together, with a YouTube video or on your own? 

And as for the cool factor – many professional athletes and movie stars now practice yoga, the girls love yoga clothing, a top bay area high school football team practices yoga and the list goes on – yoga is now cool.

In the meantime, guess what kids tell me is a cause of stress in their lives?  Stressed out adults!   Stressed adults=stressed kids.  If we, as parents, can reduce or eliminate the negative effects of stress in our own lives, we will automatically be getting rid of a negative stress in the lives of our children.  We can set a healthy example of how to deal with stress.

Fortunately some of the most effective yoga techniques that have been studied by scientists are simple and easy to do.  A simple way to think of it, is that if we move our body (a few yoga postures) then do some deep diaphragmatic belly breathing followed by a pleasant concentration technique, such as watching our breath (and not being judgmental when our mind wanders as it will inevitably do) or thinking about what we feel grateful for we can reverse the negative effects of stress in just minutes!

So instead of caving into the stresses of modern life, strike a pose, breathe deeply and sit and focus inwardly for a bit and feel the gratitude – It will do your body and mind good as well as your child’s.


Nicole DeAvilla E-RYT 500, Yoga Professor
Bestseller author of  “The 2 Minute Yoga Solution”
Creator of the 2 Minute Yoga Club

Upcoming events:

Friends of Ricki Parenting MeetUp: Nicole is the featured guest and will talk about parenting, drugs and alcohol and will lead participants in some fun 2 Minute Yoga.

Look, Feel and Be Your Best! Teleseminar July 20, 2012

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Childhood Matters - Homework Headaches

On October 30 check out the Childhood Matters radio talk show program on 98.1 KISS FM from 7:00-8:00am. The topic for Sunday, October 30 is Reducing Homework Headaches. Here is a blurb for the show:

Reducing Homework Headaches
October 30, 2011

98.1 KISS FM

7:00-8:00 am


Our children face great pressure to exceed and excel each year, starting at a very young age. One example is that the amount of homework students are assigned is increasing steadily. Join Nurse Rona and guest host Beth Samuelson, MA, of Student Organizational Services, as they discuss how to help students balance their workload and work smarter, not harder! What do you think about how much homework your child has? Do you think it helps them learn?



I thought I'd give some advice on the topic here since I won't be able to listen in that day because I'll be out of town (coincidentally) helping my son tour a school that will hopefully be less stressful for him and a better fit than the school he currently attends.

1. How do we help students balance their workload and work smarter, not harder?

Balance is key. Sign up for fewer extra curricular activities so that children are not stressed out after a day at school. Give your child the gift of unscheduled time every afternoon after school. Then, don't fill that time with hours of homework, but with other unstructured activities - hanging out with siblings, cooking, dog walking, bike riding, chilling with friends, park play time, drawing, coloring, street roller hockey, naps, etc. Once they are rejuvenated or rested from those after school activities they may have a better mindset to do a little homework.

2. What do you think about how much homework your child has?

We always focus on the amount of homework our children get. And, for good reason, because it can tend to dictate our family evenings and weekends. So, for younger children, parents need to stick to a realistic amount of time for doing homework. Even though there's no basis in research to support this, a generally accepted rule of thumb is 10 minutes per grade level per school night. So, a first grader should do only 10 minutes of homework per night and a 6th grader, 60 minutes.

And, we need to focus on the quality of the homework, too. So, if your third grader is doing 30 minutes of homework that is too difficult or too easy for him, you may write a note to the teacher at the top of the page explaining, and hopefully the teacher will adjust the work for your child. Many teachers will be receptive to making individual changes. It's perfectly acceptable to write, "My child worked on this for 30 minutes and was completely lost so I asked her to stop."

When your children get older (middle school) I find the parents can still be involved, but less so than in elementary school as far as giving their input into the homework load/quality. And in high school, your child needs to advocate for himself. The parents should be completely hands off of homework at this stage. By this point the student needs to take complete ownership of his work, grades, successes and failures.

3. Do you think homework helps your children learn?

We learn everyday in life in many ways. So yes, of course, sometimes students will learn something beneficial from a homework assignment. But, I would ask, does it get them excited about learning? Does it prompt them to ask questions and try to find answers themselves? Does it make them curious, creative, capable, cooperative learners? Often it doesn't. Often it kills the joy in learning. Often it is meaningless to them at that specific time in their lives.

If it feels meaningless, feel empowered to ask the teacher why she/he assigned a certain assignment. Or, encourage your child to ask the teacher. If the teacher is open, she will listen to feedback from parents and students. If not, just encourage your child and know that it is ok to agree with your child when they moan about a boring assignment. I usually look at the assignment and agree with my boys, "Yes, that seems pretty ridiculous. Is it helping you learn more about the subject?" And leave it at that. Don't add, "But you have to suck it up and do it because that's life and life isn't fair. Deal with it." That type of attitude just adds fuel to the fire. Just agree with your child when he is frustrated at the amount of time spent on a homework assignment or irritated with the type of assignment. You are not disrespecting the teacher, you are agreeing with an unfortunate situation. You might also add, "Well, is there anyway you can make this assignment better? What if you talked to the teacher, what would he say?" And let it go. You will be amazed at how much ownership they will take if you don't nag them to do their homework.

Also, remember the homework is your child's, it is not YOURS. Don't say, "We have to do homework now." Let her own it. As your children get older, it can prompt a lot of good discussions about boring, routine tasks and other typs of jobs that are meaningful in life.

And, one last thing. Read. Reading is the best "homework" your child can have. If your child is young, read to them and with them. Children relish uninterrupted reading time with anyone who will be there for them - siblings, parents, grandparents, friends, etc. If your child is older, talk to her about the reading she is doing. Model reading. Encourage reading. Read.


Any other thoughts? What are your comments about these questions?

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

College Interviews for Seventh Graders


I ran across this article in the newspaper recently “Around Dublin: The University of Dublin at Fallon

I liked the way this article begins,

“PRESSURE? You bet. The average GPA for incoming freshmen at the top University of California schools this past year was higher than a "perfect" 4.0 (4.39 at Cal, 4.37 at UCLA -- both weighted).

Due to the economy, the number of entry-level jobs available for graduating high school and college seniors has declined.

If you ask the average high school student, you likely will find that they are painfully aware of the statistics. They feel the pressure. In addition, many don't yet feel fully prepared for what lies ahead, whether it be the SATs and the college admission process, or in graduating and then heading into the work force.”


But then, the article took an unfortunate turn,

“Sensing an opportunity, Fallon Middle School teachers Adam Gelb and Michael Ruegg have developed what they call the "University of Dublin at Fallon" program to give students as young as seventh-graders an opportunity to start developing skills normally emphasized at the high school level.
"We wanted to give them a dry run for not only looking for a job, but above and beyond to explain what makes them different," Gelb said. "How do they stand out? How to do an interview? How to evaluate themselves? Because they are going to need to do that starting in high school."


During this past semester, the teachers led the first 150 students through the program. The students had to be responsible for completing an "application" to the university; build a résumé that goes beyond just GPA; write a personal statement to let readers better understand more about the student; practice a standardized test; and, what Gelb said may have been the most anticipated part of the program, take part in a live interview.”

I think this is the wrong way to approach the issue of too much pressure and too much emphasis on high GPAs for high school kids. In fact, I’ll bet many parents (and students) reading about 7th graders preparing college applications, interviews and résumé-building felt enormous pressure at the thought of doing this at that young of an age.

The article went on:

"’Kids spend so much time today texting and playing video games that when they are placed in front of a live person they don't really know what to do," Gelb said.”


I do agree with this, but I think teachers can incorporate face-to-face interactions with students in the regular classroom without putting seventh graders through mock college application interviews. Parents can also put limits on screen time and insist on more face-to-face time with their kids in their daily lives.

The article continued:

“The result is a program that received a great deal of positive feedback from students, parents and teachers. It may be expanded into other grade levels at Fallon, and it is being looked at by teachers at schools around the state. In fact, Gelb and Ruebb have been invited to speak about the University of Dublin at Fallon project at an upcoming state teachers conference, and to future teachers at Cal State East Bay.

"Our goal was to empower our students," Ruegg said. "By demystifying interviews, personal statements and résumé-building, we hope to give our students a leg up when the stakes are higher. Early practice in a stress-free environment can build student confidence."


Wow, I am baffled at the short-sightedness of this program. It seems to be yet another example of treating all kids like they aspire to be in the top 10% - the ones who actually end up going to a UC or equivalent school where they need a 4.0 or higher GPA to even be considered for acceptance.

I have no issue with teaching students interview skills. But I think the interview skills should be age appropriate. High school is a good time to teach students college and job interview skills. Even though, sadly, most high school students (in our neighborhood at least) don’t have jobs because they are too busy doing homework and building their résumés for their college applications after school and on weekends.

Talk about pressure. Let’s stop pushing the requirements for college on younger and younger students. Let middle school kids be middle school kids. Yes, teach them good interpersonal skills both in school and out of school, but don’t start résumé-building and interviewing for college at age 12.

Your thoughts?

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Being Happy & Raising Happy Kids

I recently read “Raising Happiness” by Christine Carter, Ph.D. and have highlighted some of my favorite quotes below. And, I also came across a video from University of Michigan professor Christopher Peterson, an expert in “positive psychology” that compliments this book nicely. If you want to watch the video it is about 5 minutes long.

Here are quotes from Raising Happiness:

"The most important work you and I will ever do will be within the walls of our own homes. —HAROLD B. LEE

Anxiety & Stress:

Anxiety in mothers … is associated with increased anxiety in children.

According to … The Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health, only about half of parents rate their children’s overall emotional and behavioral health as excellent, and 67 percent worry that their teens are too stressed.

Research shows that living in high-stress environments corresponds with a poor ability to delay gratification.

Success:

Nothing has a stronger influence psychologically … on children than the unlived life of the parent. —CARL JUNG

Even if you prioritize your children’s success over their happiness, here is why you should read this book: happiness is a tremendous advantage in a world that emphasizes performance. On average, happy people are more successful than unhappy people at both work and love.

All we have to do is clearly send the message that effort is more important than achievement. When we define success as how hard kids try rather than what kind of grades they get or whether they win the game, we foster the growth mind-set.

Optimism & Gratitude:

Realize that true happiness lies within you. Waste no time and effort searching for peace and contentment and joy in the world outside. Remember that there is no happiness in having or in getting, but only in giving… —OG MANDINO

parents who tend to explain things optimistically tend to have kids who mimic their explanatory styles—as humans, we’re wired for mimicry.

create some alone time to begin a gratitude journal. Writing about things you feel grateful for is a simple way to bring more joy into your life.

ForGIVEness is an act of kindness and generosity—toward ourselves and others. Similarly, an expression of gratitude is a gift, a sometimes tiny but often powerful and generous expression of positive feeling.

Start traditions that celebrate people on their birthdays—not toys and cake and balloons—such as telling the story of a child’s birth, or having everyone at a party complete the sentence “I’m happy you were born because …”

Marriage:

The two main things we need to do, Gottman says, are (1) handle conflict in a positive manner and (2) become better friends.

the way you fight with your co-parent is how your teenager is most likely to fight with you. If you resolve conflicts by becoming angry, so too will your adolescent. On the other hand, if you engage in more constructive problem solving, your teen is likely to mimic that as well.

If you can’t resolve the argument in front of the kids, be sure to demonstrate later that the relationship has been repaired, show them that you’ve reconnected, and tell them how the conflict was resolved.

“Children are great perceivers but poor interpreters.” Kids feel it deeply when their parents fight or when they are unhappy themselves.

When kids see us resolve our differences, and when they see us take charge of our own well-being, they learn skills that will serve them well for a lifetime.

Happiness:

If I had to pick the one thing that matters most to human happiness, I would say that our relationships with other people matter more than anything else.

So there is a lot that we can do to ensure our children’s happiness—and our own at the same time. In fact, there is a perpetual “buy one, get one free” special: teach your kids the skills they need to be happy, and you’ll become happier yourself in the process.

psychologist David Myers concludes that “there are few stronger predictors of happiness than a close, nurturing, equitable, intimate, lifelong companionship with one’s best friend.”

How well children establish relationships with other people greatly affects their happiness in childhood and later in life. … But kids who develop strong relationships and are socially intelligent—as emotional intelligence guru Daniel Goleman calls it—tend to flourish.

Happy people have different decision-making processes than unhappy people; they tend to satisfice. Maximizing is tempting for perfectionists, and it is associated with unhappiness and discontent.

When we teach children the road signs that point to happiness, we tend to find ourselves taking those same roads as well.

Because to be really happy in life—to flourish, as Fredrickson calls it—we need to experience three or more positive feelings for every negative one.

His Holiness, the Dalai Lama said, “You will need to get a job and find a partner. These are hard tasks. Even if you don’t want it to be, life is difficult. You will have problems and challenges. But even though life is difficult, it is possible to be happy.”

Communication/Conflict Resolution:

practice eye contact with our kids: studies show that eye contact opens our neural pathways for empathy.

if our faces and tone of voice say “I love you,” even when what we are literally saying might be hard to hear, our kids are likely to still feel okay about the interaction.

Effective conflict resolution requires empathy: kids have to be able to take their friends’ or siblings’ points of view into account, which presents a natural opportunity for children to learn to consider other people’s feelings.

Altruism/Empathy:

Kinder people actually live longer, healthier lives. People who volunteer tend to experience fewer aches and pains.

Adolescents who identify their primary motive as helping others are three times happier than those who lack such altruistic motivation.

The key word here is empathetic; it works better to help kids imagine the emotions of those they are helping: “I think we should share with poor children, because they would be so happy and excited if they had the money to buy food and toys. After all, poor children have almost nothing. If everyone would help these children, maybe they wouldn’t look so sad.”

Added bonus: when we expose kids to others’ suffering, they often feel compassion and gratitude.

Rewards & Motivation:

Don’t reward helping behavior. Very young children who receive material rewards for helping others become less likely to engage in further helping compared with toddlers who receive only verbal praise or no reward at all. This research suggests that even the youngest children are intrinsically motivated, and extrinsic rewards can undermine this tendency.

The more we parents can stay in our role as coaches—holding back all of our terrific (bossy!) ideas and letting kids come up with their own—the better. The best ideas come from the kids themselves, when they explore the problem from their own perspective and knowledge.

I call it ERNing, or motivating kids through Empathy, Reason, and Noncontrolling language. Before, I was motivating them to earn a reward; now I motivate them with ERN encouragement.

Instead of trying to motivate kids with rewards and incentives, we parents sometimes need to back off so that kids can work on the creative activities that they’re intrinsically motivated to do.

Fathers:

The best predictor of a dad’s involvement is the quality of his relationship with his children’s mother (whether or not they are married). If a marriage or a co-parenting relationship is fraught with conflict, fathers tend to have a difficult time being involved with their children, which of course weakens the father-child relationship. Good fathering can also strengthen a marriage. Fathers who are positively involved in their children’s lives are significantly more likely to have successful marriages.

Praise & Effort:

When we send the message to our kids that their talents are inborn—as when we tell them that they are a “natural baseball player” or “good at math”—we create an urgency in them to prove their “gifts” over and over. It isn’t that kids don’t like this praise: they do. It puffs them up and even encourages them to keep doing whatever it is they are doing. Unfortunately, when kids want to keep their special label as talented, they also start to avoid learning new things, and they start choosing activities based on whether or not they think they will succeed or fail, look smart or dumb, be accepted or rejected.

But knowing that it is practice rather than innate talent that makes a person successful can help kids take risks to rise to the top of their field—or to try something new in order to find their true passion.

Besides making them insecure and crushing the fun of learning something new, telling kids how smart they are actually hinders performance. On the other hand, the effort-praised kids continued to have fun even when they weren’t doing as well.

Achievements:

As parents put more and more pressure on their children to achieve, more and more children become perfectionists. Sometimes parents’ well-intentioned perfectionism emerges more subtly, as when we try to help kids by pointing out their mistakes in ways that make our kids feel judged and criticized. Kids conclude that they’re never good enough or can’t do anything on their own without us helping them.

Ironically, focusing on kids’ short-term achievements can prevent them from achieving more in the long term.

When kids do something quickly and perfectly, Dweck recommends saying to them: “Whoops! I guess that was too easy. I apologize for wasting your time. Let’s do something you can really learn from!”

when parents show kids that they aren’t personally invested in whether they make the team or ace the test or get into an elite college—they free their children from the fixed mindset.

Failure:

We need to protect our kids not from failure but from a life void of failure.

All we can do is help our kids with their approach and send the message that, while we expect their full commitment and solid effort, we’re also okay with their mistakes and their fumbles.

The gist of Schwartz’s research is that having a lot of choice is a curse on our happiness. Knowing this makes me feel better about restricting the choices my kids have. And I no longer think of myself as settling when I make a decision without exploring all the options. I’m modeling satisficing for my kids; and if they pick up on it, they’ll be happier in the long run.

Grit is also a core component of lifelong happiness. When kids learn that they can’t cope with life’s difficulties—because mom or dad always seems so eager to make sure that they never occur, and because mom and dad are always solving kids’ problems—the kids come to fear challenge. Mistakes become something to be avoided at all costs. This can create perfectionistic tendencies, which, …, are a particular form of unhappiness.

Anger:

Holding on to anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one getting burned. —BUDDHA

So a big part of forgiveness is the decision to stop thinking about the offense and start directing our energy toward finding a way to forgive.

Play:

unstructured and imaginative playtime builds executive function in kids, an important cognitive skill related to self-regulation.

Researchers concluded that the decline in the amount of time kids “practiced playing”…was responsible for this decline in their ability to self-regulate.

child-led, unstructured play (with or without adults) promotes intellectual, physical, social, and emotional well-being. Unstructured play helps children learn how to work in groups, to share, negotiate, resolve conflicts, regulate their emotions and behavior, and speak up for themselves.

Play is a catalyst that makes us more productive and happier in everything we do. And it is critical for children’s brain development. So we driven parents need to curb our impulses to sacrifice good old-fashioned play in favor of preschool academics and structured sports.

If you notice yourself frowning, sighing, or rolling your eyes when your children aren’t playing the way you want them to, take a step back and let them run the show.

Children who engage in more pretend play with peers tend to demonstrate a greater understanding of other kids’ emotions.

Increased emotional intelligence and social skills contribute dramatically to children’s school success. Play increases the odds that kids will be persistent and stay engaged in difficult classroom tasks, helping them become more involved learners.

Fantasy play expands kids’ cognitive and behavioral repertoires, leading to more highly developed creativity, divergent thinking, and cooperative problem-solving skills.

Punishment:

Like being psychologically controlling, punitive parenting wreaks havoc on children’s ability to discipline themselves.

deprivation of privileges and corporal punishment—social science has built a clear body of evidence that shows that these techniques are ultimately ineffective and certainly undesirable for those interested in raising happy children.

As Alfie Kohn says, “Don’t move a child roughly if you can move her gently; don’t move her gently if you can tell her to move; don’t tell her if you can ask her.”

Day Care:

High-quality care makes your child more likely to have higher standardized math, reading, and memory scores, but only through the third grade. By the time kids are about eleven, the only lasting academic benefit of high-quality care is relatively higher vocabulary scores.

We do know that the more time that kids spend in nonmaternal care relative to their peers, the more likely they will be rated by their teachers and caregivers as talking, bragging, and arguing too much, disobedient and defiant, talking out of turn and talking back to staff, and otherwise disruptive in school, aggressive: more likely to get into fights; be cruel, bullying, or mean; and be destructive to their own belongings

Child psychologists and education specialists have repeatedly found that kids who devote more time to complex pretend play before grade school age (versus kids who spend a lot of time in structured or caregiver-directed activities) are more likely to be cognitively and socially competent with peers and adults.

Kids in child-focused schools, rather than in didactic programs that spend more time teaching academic skills directly, show more motivation at school.

So while didactic preschool programs do improve kids’ scores on reading (but not math) achievement tests, they can kill kids’ love of learning.

Family Meals:

The benefits of family mealtimes for kids are remarkable. Studies show that kids who eat dinner with their families on a regular basis are more emotionally stable and less likely to abuse drugs and alcohol. They get better grades. They have fewer depressive symptoms, particularly among adolescent girls. And they are less likely to become obese or have an eating disorder. Family dinners even trump reading to your kids in terms of preparing them for school."


The author of “Raising Happiness” was interviewed in Diablo magazine and you can check that out here.

Any thoughts on happiness or any other comments?


Monday, September 6, 2010

Brains Need Downtime, Too

I recently listened to a NPR Fresh Air interview with Matt Richtel who covers technology and telecommunications for The New York Times.

You can listen to the 30-minute interview here:

Richtel received the Pulitzer Prize in 2010 for a series in The New York Times on driving while multitasking.

Here are some highlights from the interview:

“One study conducted at Stanford University, which showed that heavy multimedia users have trouble filtering out irrelevant information — and trouble focusing on tasks. It starts to take a toll on your productivity.

Other research says that heavy video game playing may release dopamine, which is thought to be involved with addictive behaviors.

Your brain effectively processes one stream of information at a time. E.g., If you are at a cocktail party and hear several conversations you can only focus on one at a time. Apply that concept to a work environment where you are multitasking. When you switch among tasks, you cut your effectiveness at each one of them by a significant degree.

Richtel says that research is ongoing, particularly into how heavy technology may fundamentally alter the frontal lobe during childhood, how addictive behavior can lead to poor decision-making and how the brain is rewired when it is constantly inundated with new information.

One way of looking at all of this research, he says, is to think of technology the way we think about food.

Just as food nourishes us and we need it for life, so too — in the 21st century and the modern age — we need technology. You cannot survive without the communication tools; the productivity tools are essential," he says. "And yet, food has pros and cons to it. We know that some food is junk food and some food is healthy. And we know that if we overeat, it causes problems. Similarly, after 20 years of glorifying technology as if all computers were good and all use of it was good, science is beginning to embrace the idea that some technology is Twinkies and some technology is Brussels sprouts.

What if you don’t have downtime and you are always fiddling with your device? There seems to be some evidence that this takes a neurological toll…it seems you are not spending time creating. During boredom you may be creating something…When you are constantly on your device, you can be experiencing stress.

What’s the effect on long-term memory? The short answer is we are not sure yet but over time heavy cortisol production [stress related] can reduce your ability to retain memory. This is a working hypothesis.

What are the upsides to technology? Research from the University of Rochester indicates that certain video gamers have more visual acuity than those who don't game. And there's value in offloading thinking to a computer, he says — by, for example, using Google Maps instead of calling for directions or organizing information in Excel instead of keeping track of it in your head.

We are not unaware of the enormous benefits technology provides.“

To read his NYTimes article on the subject go here:


Any thoughts on multitasking, especially as it relates to students?

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Challenge Success Conference - Sept 25, 09

Check out the Challenge Success Website (http://www.challengesuccess.org/)

Our children live in a high-stakes, high-pressure world.

Today, a young person's success is too often measured by easily-observed symbols: trophies, grades, test scores, and acceptance into prestigious schools. Expectations once reserved for a small group of exceptional students are now expected of many.

Our children are experiencing unacceptably high levels of anxiety disorders, depression, substance abuse, suicide, poor physical health, and disengagement from learning. Unrealistic achievement pressure contributes to these problems.

Our children are not prepared for the challenges of the 21st century.

Educators, mental health professionals, and business leaders agree that the pursuit of a narrow vision of success often leaves young people lacking the skills most needed to thrive in a rapidly changing world--adaptability, interpersonal and collaborative skills, and the ingenuity and creativity to solve complex problems.

About Our Conferences

Challenge Success offers dynamic conferences for schools, parents, and youth to come together to address issues of student health, school engagement, and academic integrity. All conferences take place at Stanford University, where school teams comprised of principals, teachers, parents, counselors, students, and other community members work together to create site-specific plans for school reform.

Our Challenge Success Annual Fall Conference takes place in September and includes a Friday night plenary session that is free and open to the public. Keynote speakers are experts in child development, medicine, psychology, public health, college admissions, and/or education. These experts are joined by a panel of student speakers who offer personal viewpoints on academic stress and coping strategies.

Challenge Success/SOS Conference:

Our Fall 2009 Conference will take place on September 25-26, 2009.

Fall Plenary Session Free and Open to the Public

Friday September 25, 2009

Memorial Auditorium, Stanford University, 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm

Introduction:

Denise Pope, Ph.D., Co-founder, Challenge Success/SOS, Stanford University School of Education Senior Lecturer, and author of “Doing School": How we are creating a generation of stressed-out, materialistic, and miseducated students. http://www.amazon.com/Doing-School-Stressed-Out-Materialistic-Miseducated/dp/0300098332/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1252434758&sr=1-1

Keynote Speakers:

Michael Thompson, Ph.D. is a consultant, author and psychologist specializing in children and families. He is the clinical consultant to The Belmont Hill School and has worked in more than five hundred schools across the United States, as well as in international schools in Central America, Europe and Asia. He and his co-author, Dan Kindlon, wrote the New York Times best-selling book, Raising Cain: Protecting the Emotional Life of Boys (Ballantine Books,1999). In addition, Dr. Thompson is the author of several other acclaimed books, including Best Friends/Worst Enemies: Understanding the Social Worlds of Children(Ballantine, 2001) and The Pressured Child: Helping Your Child Achieve Success in School and in Life (with Teresa Barker, Ballantine, 2004).

Chris Kelly is the Chief Privacy Officer and Head of Global Public Policy at Facebook, guiding Facebook’s efforts to make the Internet a safer and more trusted place. He has previously served as Chief Privacy Officer at three other Internet companies, Spoke Software, Excite@Home, and Kendara, and was an attorney in private practice at Baker & McKenzie and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich and Rosati. Chris also served as a policy advisor in the Clinton Administration. He was Editor in Chief of the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology and part of the founding team for the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

Panelists:

Madeline Levine, Ph.D., Co-founder, Challenge Success/SOS, and clinical psychologist and best-selling author of The Price of Privilege.

Three Students will offer their perspectives on primary stressors and coping strategies in middle school and high school.


To RSVP for the Friday night session, go to:

http://www.challengesuccess.org/Events/Conferences/Fall/PlenarySessionRSVP/tabid/1016/Default.aspx