Say Yes To No
 Monday, September 29, 2008
« When does helping your child undercut th... | Main | My Child Doesn’t Pay Attention? »
The switch from summer days to school days is always a challenge.  There’s more scheduling, homework, assignments, parent nights at school, communication with teachers, books, clean clothes, lunches …and then when the day is finished there’s the need to sleep.    And yes, your kids need a good night’s sleep also.  A good night’s sleep for kids is key to their ability to cope and learn the next day at school.  A sleepy kid in a classroom just won’t be alert.  When the lesson asks for brain power, a sleepy child’s brain will scream for zzz’s.

How much sleep do children need?  There are individual differences, but here are the recommendations from the National Sleep Foundation:
    1.  Toddlers: 12-14 hours
    2.  Preschoolers: 11-13 hours
    3.  School-age (1st through 5th grades): 10-11 hours
    4.  Preteens: a little over 9 hours
    5.  Teenagers: 8 to 9.5 hours of sleep

Not getting enough sleep can actually interfere with the brain’s ability to understand what’s being said.  Like a series of dominoes, a child’s capacity to learn and cope decreases.  How a child is able to participate and perform in a classroom is directly dependent on how much sleep he or she got the night before.  Even an hour less of optimal sleep has a negative impact.

What is a major sleep thief for kids?  Besides caffeinated drinks, it turns out that electronics in the bedroom, from cell phones to computers and TVs are major sleep robbers.  A child who is hyped up with an increase of adrenaline from a video game or TV program will have a hard time calming down and falling asleep.  Talking on a cell phone actually increases alpha waves in the brain which are not conducive to going to sleep.   

What’s the ticket to a good night’s sleep?  Establish a consistent bedtime routine.  Make bedtime relaxing.  Avoid hard exercise, caffeinated drinks and a big meal right before bedtime.  And most of all keep electronics out of the bedroom.  What bedtime routines work for your child?

Dr. Dave

Monday, September 29, 2008 11:24:06 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
Comments are closed.
On this page....
Archives
<January 2009>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
28293031123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Feed your aggregator (RSS 2.0)
Search
Categories
About

Disclaimer
The comments expressed herein do not represent the opinions of the National Institute on Media and the Family or the Say Yes to No coalition members.

© Copyright 2009, National Institute on Media and the Family, Minneapolis, MN

Send mail to the author(s) E-mail



Sign In