Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What time are all these kids going to bed? Mine has to be up at 6:40 for school.
9pm. The days he doesn't get home until 830pm are a little rough. This is a 10 year old.
At younger ages we didnt do as many evening activities because bed time was earlier. Until 2nd grade he went to bed around 730pm.
But we are in Fairfax so he doesn't need to wake until about 8am so a little later now is fine.[/quote
Your threshold for activities definitely depends on what time your kids need to wake up. My kids have activities until late but it works because they wake up at 7:30 am, not 6! That's one fo the reasons I think people end up talking past each other in these activity conversations, different kids have a different number of hours in the evenings because of times they finish schol, bedtimes and school wake up times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trying to gage what is normal… can you share your dc’s weekly activity schedule?
For us, 8yo dc has M: Tennis, T:, Soccer, W: Math, Th: Lacrosse and taekwondo, F: Theater, S: Taekwondo, Sun: Soccer and taekwondo.
4yo has M: Kumon, W: Kumon, F: Taekwondo, S: Baseball.
Way too much!
Anonymous wrote:Trying to gage what is normal… can you share your dc’s weekly activity schedule?
For us, 8yo dc has M: Tennis, T:, Soccer, W: Math, Th: Lacrosse and taekwondo, F: Theater, S: Taekwondo, Sun: Soccer and taekwondo.
4yo has M: Kumon, W: Kumon, F: Taekwondo, S: Baseball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your poor children. My kid comes homes and plays. Then he does his homework and chores. He does one activity each week- rock climbing. I cannot imagine it is healthy to be on the go all of the time like that.
I have an only child. We have tried just coming home to play but nobody else is around, and building legos or playing outside on his own is fine. But he often has more fun and more social time if I put him in 2/week soccer or a team so he can be around friends.
Anonymous wrote:Insane for the super young.
My kids are 6 and 4. Six year old is in an eight week basketball program on Wednesdays after school. We go to church as family on Sunday. That’s it.
We were doing swimming lessons in the fall, but the schedule didn’t work well for us for spring. We’ll start again this coming fall.
Look, you parents of 8+ year olds, I won’t presume to know what makes sense at those ages, but a kid who is seven and under should not be in that many structured activities PLUS a full day of school. Let your kid just play for god’s sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many Asian tigers on this board obv with the violin, piano, tennis, math enrichment
I mean if we are going to speak that generally, Russians also love music and math for their children. What I have not been able to figure out in driving kids to activities - where are the Indian musicians? I see American, Russian, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Mongolian, etc. 2nd generation kids at music lessons and orchestra but maybe 1% Indian kids in a fairly Indian-heavy community. We did chess for awhile and it was 80% Indian. I'm just curious, since Russians/Chinese/Indian culture are geographically and in some ways culturally similar, except that Russian and Chinese really excel in music while I don't see any Indian musical talent. Is it discouraged?
I forgot to say that I see chess, music, and math as being very closely linked and Indians absolutely dominate at chess (and historically chinese and russians too), but only Chinese and Russians dominate in classical music.
Indian kids are busy learning Indian classical music, vocal and instrumental. Most girls learn classical dance as well (Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kuchupudi).
Just like Western classical, these are hard to master and require a decade of committed practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many Asian tigers on this board obv with the violin, piano, tennis, math enrichment
I mean if we are going to speak that generally, Russians also love music and math for their children. What I have not been able to figure out in driving kids to activities - where are the Indian musicians? I see American, Russian, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Mongolian, etc. 2nd generation kids at music lessons and orchestra but maybe 1% Indian kids in a fairly Indian-heavy community. We did chess for awhile and it was 80% Indian. I'm just curious, since Russians/Chinese/Indian culture are geographically and in some ways culturally similar, except that Russian and Chinese really excel in music while I don't see any Indian musical talent. Is it discouraged?
I forgot to say that I see chess, music, and math as being very closely linked and Indians absolutely dominate at chess (and historically chinese and russians too), but only Chinese and Russians dominate in classical music.
Indian kids are busy learning Indian classical music, vocal and instrumental. Most girls learn classical dance as well (Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kuchupudi).
Just like Western classical, these are hard to master and require a decade of committed practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:many Asian tigers on this board obv with the violin, piano, tennis, math enrichment
I mean if we are going to speak that generally, Russians also love music and math for their children. What I have not been able to figure out in driving kids to activities - where are the Indian musicians? I see American, Russian, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Mongolian, etc. 2nd generation kids at music lessons and orchestra but maybe 1% Indian kids in a fairly Indian-heavy community. We did chess for awhile and it was 80% Indian. I'm just curious, since Russians/Chinese/Indian culture are geographically and in some ways culturally similar, except that Russian and Chinese really excel in music while I don't see any Indian musical talent. Is it discouraged?
I forgot to say that I see chess, music, and math as being very closely linked and Indians absolutely dominate at chess (and historically chinese and russians too), but only Chinese and Russians dominate in classical music.
Anonymous wrote:That seems wild to me. I also have kids (aged 7-14) who like keeping busy, but even my oldest is not so structured. They like to ride bikes, go hiking, go fishing, play outside, read, have friends over, play board games, etc. They all do one low key sport (between 1-3 days a week) and the older ones also do 1-2 after-school clubs. I do keep them busy with camps in summer because we work FT and they prefer camps over a nanny and hanging out by the pool.
I make them all take piano for 2 years and learn how to swim (they just need to learn front crawl) and even those requirements are like pulling teeth. The kids resist so much!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That seems wild to me. I also have kids (aged 7-14) who like keeping busy, but even my oldest is not so structured. They like to ride bikes, go hiking, go fishing, play outside, read, have friends over, play board games, etc. They all do one low key sport (between 1-3 days a week) and the older ones also do 1-2 after-school clubs. I do keep them busy with camps in summer because we work FT and they prefer camps over a nanny and hanging out by the pool.
I make them all take piano for 2 years and learn how to swim (they just need to learn front crawl) and even those requirements are like pulling teeth. The kids resist so much!
Not every kid resists. We have one (10) and she asks to do everything and we have to set boundaries on her.
I think it's one thing if a kid has lots of hobbies (and 10 is a great age to have capacity to try and do a lot of things - you don't have as many school demands yet, are old enough to really develop skills, and you don't need the same amount of free play and early bedtimes any longer) - but a lot of the activities listed on here are almost certainly parent-directed (such as the violin, piano, tennis, Kumon combos).
Anonymous wrote:What time are all these kids going to bed? Mine has to be up at 6:40 for school.