|
Shower every night.
Phone off 9pm In bed by 10pm Wake - 7am 9hrs of sleep and a happy kid because of it. |
Exactly!! |
The bad thing is referring to kids hobby as “passion and commitment”. |
|
No one commented on it, so i’ll bring it up again…could a block schedule had a positive impact on kids sleep schedules by reducing the amount of homework each night?
My oldest is a freshman this year and taking a couple honors classes in addition to some extra curriculars a couple days a week. Right now they are getting enough sleep (10/10:30-6ish with an after school nap on the no extra curricular days) but I know things may ramp up in later years. Block scheduling seems like a more viable option than changing start times. Is it worth discussing? |
I don’t really understand the question. Yes, I think block scheduling helps by typically giving students 2 nights vs 1 to complete homework for a given class. But what do you mean by “viable option” and “worth discussing?” Are you thinking of moving your child to a school with block scheduling? |
Its not when you have a passion and your committed to it. |
Anyone that thinks 7 hours of school doesn’t need a 4 hr break to do something they actually love before getting back to school work doesn’t understand balance. Your math is off they get 7-8 hrs of sleep |
+1 I thought block schedules were the standard in HS? |
Not everywhere. My DD's friends attend schools that do not have block scheduling and it does sound more intense to me and I'm glad my DD has block scheduling. There's a controversy, though, about which is better. |
I don’t any school that doesn’t already have block scheduling. That’s probably why no one commented. No one commented on my post either. A late arrival helped a lot for us. Don’t take a first block class. It’s easy to change schedules around with virtual options now, at least when they get a little older. Take easier classes if so many AP courses are causing 4-5 hours of homework. My kids won’t do that and don’t care about getting into the “most selective” colleges. They are well adjusted, rested and happy. |