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Are You Hyper-Parenting?

Updated Jul 29, 2011
Are You Hyper-Parenting?

Parents often ask me, as a former piano teacher, when they should begin their child in piano lessons. When I recommend no earlier than second grade, they are amazed.

Part of my answer comes from my experience teaching young children and finding that second grade is the earliest most children have the ability to sit still to practice and have the reading abilities that allow them to read music.

The other reason I suggest second grade comes from what I've learned as a parent and the tendency we have to want to get our child involved in organized activities much earlier than they need to be.

In Primary Psychiatry magazine, Alvin Rosenfeld and Nicole Wise, the authors of an article titled "Let Kids Be Kids: Avoiding the Hyper-Parenting Trap," coined the phrase "hyper-parenting" to describe a trend they are seeing in parenting. It seems today's parents are making it their sacred responsibility to provide their child with every enrichment opportunity possible: sports, music, academics, etc.

At the same time, the medical and psychiatric industry is seeing an increase in children's stress factors because activities have so filled their calendars that they are overwhelmed and even sleep-deprived.

Why do we do this as parents? Because we want to give our children the best. However, sometimes we're missing what really is best.

Dr. Kevin Leman tells the story of a 4-year-old boy playing outfield in a T-ball game.

When the ball came his way, the crowd yelled for him to get the ball. However, this little guy was on the ground on his hands and knees searching desperately for something in the grass. He was completely oblivious to the ballgame he was supposed to be playing.

When his father yelled for him to get the ball, little Joey looked up and said, "I can't get the ball. I'm looking for a four-leaf clover!"

Indeed, what is often best for our kids is to let them be kids. Searching for four-leaf clovers, playing in the sandbox, flying kites and playing a game of tag in the back yard -- these are the activities kids need to do in the preschool and early elementary years.

Rosenfeld and Wise indicate that for some of us parenting has become America's most competitive adult sport.

"Parents have come to see a child's success quantified by 'achievements' like speaking early or qualifying for the gifted and talented program at school as the measure of parental success. ... They have come to believe that it is activities and accomplishments, not warm relationships, that make a child 'successful' in life."

How can we steer clear of the hyper-parenting trap?

We need to focus on relationships and more time with our families, not more activities that distract us from what is really important in life. Activities do help children identify their gifts, talents and abilities. The key is finding a balance in the load of activities being carried as well as carefully considering the age at which they are introduced. Here are some principles for keeping a balance:

Assess age-appropriateness. Just because they offer classes for toddlers doesn't mean toddlers need to take classes. We need to be careful about making children grow up too fast.

Limit activities. Some families make firm rules (i.e. one sport per child per season) while others make decisions on a case-by-case basis. "Weigh the benefit against the cost (time, energy, logistical effort, stress, expense) to you, your child, and the family," suggest Rosenfeld and Wise.

Prioritize family. Relationships matter ... a lot. Our families need to know how to play together, not just ride in the car together from one activity to the next. Consider making one night a week family night. Set aside time to play sports or board games, go fishing or just relax and talk with one another.

Create margin. Boredom needs to be a goal of parents. Unscheduled time encourages children to create and imagine. It helps them to learn how to fill their time rather than expect others to entertain them.

As parents, one of our jobs is to help our children learn to manage their time, resources and abilities. In these things, more is caught than taught. They will learn by watching us manage our lives as well as experiencing the schedule we create for them. Let's let kids be kids in the early years of their lives. It will set a foundation of balance that will serve them well into adulthood.

By the way, American composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein didn't sit down at a piano before his 10th birthday. See, second grade isn't too late.

 


Jill Savage (http://www.jillsavage.org/) is the founder and Executive Director of Hearts at Home (http://www.hearts-at-home.org/), an organization designed to encourage, educate, and equip women in the profession of motherhood.  She is the author of five books including Professionalizing Motherhood, Is There Really Sex After Kids?, and her newest release My Heart’s At Home (Harvest House Publishers).  Jill and her husband, Mark, have five children and make their home in Central Illinois.

 

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