Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
I’d like to know where people draw the line. An activity per week day? Never having two activities on one day? Certain number of hours per week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
I’d like to know where people draw the line. An activity per week day? Never having two activities on one day? Certain number of hours per week?
Two activities at a time max. Kids, imo don't have enough free time. For me personally, no travel anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
I’d like to know where people draw the line. An activity per week day? Never having two activities on one day? Certain number of hours per week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
I’d like to know where people draw the line. An activity per week day? Never having two activities on one day? Certain number of hours per week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
They're a different breed for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I admit we over scheduled this year. Weekly music lesson - necessitates daily practice. 2 days martial arts, 1 day ice skating, weekend language school on Saturdays (also means homework on weekdays). My kid loves all these but didn't get enough free time to just read which is their favorite activity. We also had then in aftercare before some activities since we WOH. Summer will be camp, swim and music.
Even tigers need to rest
. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
I think almost everyone agrees that overscheduling is by definition bad. However, the threshold for overscheduling is highly subjective. The folks on the sports board trying to impose their definition of overscheduling on every family are quite comical.
Anonymous wrote:I admit we over scheduled this year. Weekly music lesson - necessitates daily practice. 2 days martial arts, 1 day ice skating, weekend language school on Saturdays (also means homework on weekdays). My kid loves all these but didn't get enough free time to just read which is their favorite activity. We also had then in aftercare before some activities since we WOH. Summer will be camp, swim and music.
Anonymous wrote:Overscheduling threads are wild. I'm participating in one on the sports forum. Alot of ppl don't acknowledge it as a real thing
Anonymous wrote:During the school year, DS did a sport per season with some overlap plus music lesson weekly and a Saturday 3 hour activity. Over the summer he will have camp until 2:45 and 1 activity twice a week, a sport once a week, and then I just added 30 minute swim lessons for safety. How much is too much? He gets lots of sleep, plays with friends, and doesn’t seem stressed, is enthusiastic about it all. He wanted to do another 2 weeks of sports camp and I said no.