Anonymous wrote:I taught in a UMC area a few years ago and when kids are constantly in motion and have activities provided to them all of the time, they become anxious/uneasy when there is down time. “What do I do know?” They couldn’t sit and draw or read for a few minutes in between classes. They would ask that question repeatedly. Any kind of downtime was a problem that they wanted an adult to solve.
Anonymous wrote:Despite someone saying that kids will be better at using downtime if they have more of it, my experience is that this isn't always the case. Lot of kids are addicted to screens.
Anonymous wrote:I think that there are two sets of problems with overscheduling.
One is when an individual child has too much going on, and isn't getting enough downtime to recharge their batteries and learn all the skills that come with downtime. This is really variable from kid to kid.
The other is when a family system is stressed. I often read posts on here where a parent says that they can never sit down for a meal together because their 3 kids' sports conflict. I've known families who say the parents can't exercise because every minute of their day is booked with work, or commuting, or driving their kids to activities. I know a family whose youngest kid, a preschooler, is strapped in a carseat for hours every day driving from activity to activity.
I have no idea if OP's kid is overscheduled, or if their family is overscheduled. It sounds like OP has one child and either a parent who is home after school, or a childcare provider who is taking the kid to all these activities. In that situation, with the right kid, 7 activities a week might be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone says it's bad for kids to have too many structured extracurriculars, but why? My kid does two activities 3 days a week each and I don't see what's wrong with it. She loves the activities and isn't ready to choose between them yet. She also does an instrument that has a lesson once a week and she practices every day. When she's not at her activities she's having unstructured play -- she doesn't watch tv or have an iPad.
Is there any actual research that says having lots of activities is bad for kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are so many pro overscheduling? I really dont get it.
Sounds like some people think if a kid has any scheduling it’s too much.
Anonymous wrote:Why are so many pro overscheduling? I really dont get it.