Tag Archives: Family

Routine – what’s all the fuss about?!?!

English: Group of children in a primary school...

English: Group of children in a primary school in Paris Español: Niños en una escuela elemental en París Français : Enfants dans une école élémentaire à Paris (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It’s a new year at school and we are settling into our routines nicely now.  The children are getting to know the teachers and the teachers are finding out how each child responds and what they like and dislike.

It’s really amazing how teachers can tell whether a child has a routine at home or whether they don’t.  We have children who eat “around the room” and some who can sit at the table and eat their lunch.  This tells us that a child doesn’t have boundaries in this area at home.  We can tell when children get to have things “their way” all the time or whether or not they have to take turns and share.  It really doesn’t take much to figure out whether the child rules the home or whether the parents do.  It’s not rocket science and it isn’t really all that hard to figure out.  If a child does not have a regular bedtime we can tell that too.  We can even tell when a child lives with grandparents or if a home has been split and the parents are not living together anymore.  Children are open books and their actions tell a lot about what happens in their family dynamic.

Routine plays a big role in how children interact with one another and with adults.

You might be thinking “what’s all the fuss”, routine can be boring.  And you’re right about that.  Adults can find routine very voring.   But it’s not boring for a child.  Routine is comforting.  Routine helps regulate mood.  It plays a role in how children eat.  It plays a big part in a persons life.   It enables the child to feel safe and it helps a child to regulate their own behaviors and it dictates how a child responds to almost everything.

If you’re unsure of this, come visit a Preschool.  Watch the children.  Observe their reactions.  Observe when the routine is changed and their response to it.

Children can weather through the changes in life if their family life is stable and their is routine within that stability but if that is shaken then a child loses the ability to know what is safe, right or wrong.

You might be wondering what you can do about it if your family homelife has become unstable for some reason.  You might wonder how your kids will turn out.  If this is the case for you, start giving your child more routine in their life and you’ll see a change in how they respond.  They’ll feel safer, more calm, they will be easier to manage and it’ll probably be a great thing for you too.

Don’t underestimate the power of routine.  Try it out today.  You’ll be glad you did.

Cell Phones – wonderful invention or hazard to families

Closeup of a female speaking outside on a cell...

Image via Wikipedia

Happy New Year everyone!  What a great holiday break, spending time with family and friends.  It was great reconnecting and finding out what was happening in everyone’s lives.  I hope you had a great break with family and friends as well.

Which sort of brings me to today’s blog.  Connecting with our families.  Families are priceless.  A price can’t be put on how much our families are worth to us.  But these days, I don’t always see that played out in our everyday lives.  This thing called the cell phone is coming between people and not in a good way.  Oh you might say it’s great because now I can talk to all of my family at any time of the day but to what end?  Have you ever noticed someone talking on the phone to someone and ignoring the person right in front of them.  Well, I have.  And I see it a lot at the Preschool.  Children who are at the Preschool are here because their parents need, choose, want, to work.  Or because parents want their children to have opportunities to connect with other children their age.  There are many reasons.  But the one thing in common to all of these parents is that their children can’t wait for them to pick them up and tell them or show them what they’ve done that day.  Yet, I see parents walk in the school on their cell phone and walk out of the school still on their cell phone.  Barely acknowledging their children.  This sends a message, LOUD and CLEAR, to the child.  “YOU ARE NOT AS IMPORTANT AS THIS PERSON I AM TALKING TO”.  You’re thinking, No that’s not true, they don’t think that.  But it is true.  Children need to feel loved.  They need to be told they are cared about and they need to be SHOWN that you care for them.  If you’re with someone at dinner and they get a call on their phone and they sit and talk to that person for 5 or 10 minutes.  How does that make you feel?  Or have you every gone to a counter at the store where the sales person is on her phone?  Don’t you just want to grab it away and say “I’m the customer, I’m the important one right now”?  Of course there are exceptions to the rule.  But I don’t see the exception happening.  I see people doing it as an everyday occurrence.  Let me just say this right now in as recpectful a way as I can,  GET OFF THE PHONE!  It’s rude.  It’s rude to the teacher.  It’s rude to the other parents and it’s rude to your own child.  Put the phone away.  Let your child know they are the most important one right at that moment.  Let them tell you about their day, or their art project or about their new friend.  Show them how much you love them.  Please, please, please don’t let the cell phone determine for you how you are going to act to you beloved family or your wonderful friends.  The Preschool staff is important too.  Choose to rule your cell phone and don’t let it rule you.

Thanks for listening!!

Barbara

Vector image of two human figures with hands i...

Image via Wikipedia

I read about something today that disturbed me but it didn’t surprise me. It was an article about child abuse and the recession and how child abuse happens more frequently in a recession. It disturbed me because whenever I read or hear about child abuse it disturbs me. But it didn’t surprise me because whenever people feel oppressed or depressed or when things become out of control people suffer. And many times those people are children. Their parents are suffering and it gets passed down to the children. We see it everyday at our school. When the family moves…it affects the children. When Mom and Dad are fighting…it affects the children. If a grandparent or family member dies…it affects the children. When Mom or Dad are sick…it affects the children. There are varying degrees of how the children are affected but you can always tell when something is happening in the life of a family. Parents, don’t think you can hide from your kids. They are like bloodhounds and unless you are a very good actor they pick up on your mood and it affects them.
So, I was thinking about this in light of the recession and another teacher and I were trying to think about how you could lighten the affects of the recession. My husband and I like to eat out, a form of entertainment but it’s expensive and when you’re being squeezed for all your pennies what can you do? I’ve been trying to identify all the places in town that offer “special cheap food” nights so that I can still enjoy eating out without going broke. Maybe you’re a movie buff. Renting a dollar video and making popcorn and turning off all the lights in the house might make you feel like you’re at the movies. What about picnics in the park now that the weather is nicer? I know that won’t replace the job that you just lost or put more money in the bank but it might just give you the boost you need to help your family get through the tough times.  Anybody have any other suggestions? Let’s brainstorm ideas and see what we come up with, shall we?

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Self-Esteem in children

Dad and daughter

Image by Peter Werkman (www.peterwerkman.nl) via Flickr

I posted some information on Facebook today about girls and their body image. I don’t know if you’ve noticed but girls are bombarded by the wrong message of what makes them attractive and beautiful. Contrary to the tabloids and fashion magazines out there it isn’t how they dress or whether they are tall, short, blonde, brunette, redhead, overweight or skinny. I know, you say, it’s what’s inside. You’re darn right it’s what’s inside. Unfortunately the world isn’t telling them this. So who’s going to do it? Let me tell you that parents and aunts and uncles, grandmas and grandpas need to be the ones who step up and help our young
girls to be proud of themselves. Loving a child unconditionally is what makes for a healthy body image in young girls. No, that doesn’t mean letting them do whatever they want. It means instructing them in what’t real and what’s not real. Let me say, dads, that you are the most
important person in a girls life to help them to love themselves and to develop that healthy self-esteem. You are the key — telling your child she’s beautiful and showing her is essential to the life of a healthy young woman. Yep, that’s right dad. So get to it!! Step it up. Play an instrumental role in your daughter’s life. You will NEVER
regret it. Who knows…you may be raising the next President of the United States.

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