Anonymous wrote:DD is a 5th grader too. Her schedule is below:
3:45pm arrives home
3:45-4:30pm snack, video game, tv whatever
4:30-6:30pm home work, reading
6:30-7:30pm dinner/relax
7:30-8:15pm shower, dessert
8:15-9:00pm piano (+15 min. piano before school)
9:00-10:00pm violin
This schedule has been in effect since 1st gr. so far working pretty good.
Anonymous wrote:Right after school, we do snack/down time for about an hour. Then homework. This has been our routine since first grade. If she does not finish, then we finish after dinner. I like to get an early start, because I don't know how long it will take.
Anonymous wrote:1.5 hours of screen time seems like a lot to me, even if some national group says it is ok. That is a lot of wasted time and it teaches a kid that they need a screen to unwind. Unwinding in the kitchen while helping make dinner or unwinding by reading a book or Skyping with a cousin seem better to me. When do kids just get time to sit with their nose in a book or play outside? When go they just hang out with their family members?
I am sure the kid who practices violin until 10 pm loves it, but that also seems excessive and likely parent-driven (given that there are specific times he has to start and stop).
These kids end up tired and anxious and mildly depressed by high school in my observation.
I would aim for homework after school, and then family time (which includes dinner prep and clean up). The best conversations I had with my teens were while we cooked and did dishes. The funniest conversations they had with each other were at that time as well.
You can't start that habit when they are 14 and you want them to talk with you. Start when they are 4.
Sorry for the diatribe. It just makes me wish families could keep the bigger and long-term picture in mind. An emotionally healthy kid comes out of an unhurried environment where people enjoy each other and make time for each other.
Anonymous wrote:1.5 hours of screen time seems like a lot to me, even if some national group says it is ok. That is a lot of wasted time and it teaches a kid that they need a screen to unwind. Unwinding in the kitchen while helping make dinner or unwinding by reading a book or Skyping with a cousin seem better to me. When do kids just get time to sit with their nose in a book or play outside? When go they just hang out with their family members?
I am sure the kid who practices violin until 10 pm loves it, but that also seems excessive and likely parent-driven (given that there are specific times he has to start and stop).
These kids end up tired and anxious and mildly depressed by high school in my observation.
I would aim for homework after school, and then family time (which includes dinner prep and clean up). The best conversations I had with my teens were while we cooked and did dishes. The funniest conversations they had with each other were at that time as well.
You can't start that habit when they are 14 and you want them to talk with you. Start when they are 4.
Sorry for the diatribe. It just makes me wish families could keep the bigger and long-term picture in mind. An emotionally healthy kid comes out of an unhurried environment where people enjoy each other and make time for each other.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the feedback. Someone felt that the 1 1/2 hours a day of screen time was too much. Her screen time has been 10 1/2 hours a week since she was around 5. I'm following the recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics, which is no more than 1 or 2 hours per day. Note again: she is purposely not allowed an account on any social media such as FB or Instagram, which can be super addictive.
To be honest, I think her screen time is quite low compared to other kids who do 2 hours of video games a day, plus an hour or two of tv a day. As for her habit of doing it at the same time, that's because she likes to watch certain shows at those times. As I said, I always watched the "4:30 Movie" in NY when I was younger...it didn't hurt my academics in the least.
On Saturdays and Sundays she is also limited to 1 1/2 hours a day for total screen time. It works out fine for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:by the way, op, am i reading this correctly or did you basically say your child sits in front of the TV or a computer screen daily from the moment she comes home from school until just before dinner? That sounds more habitual than it does about needing to unwind.
For an hour and a half, is what the OP said. Which I think is too much. I don't think an hour and a half of unwinding is too much, but seven and a half hours of screentime during the week is.
OP, I'd tell her since her homework is not getting done in a timely fashion, she's now going to be put on an Incentive Program. When she gets home from school she has to do her homework FIRST. If she gets that and shower done before 5:30, then she can play on the computer the next day AFTER homework & shower are completed.
Welcome to life. You have to fulfill obligations before doing fun stuff.