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Creating Balance for Overscheduled Students
Today, building their child's resume is a task that many parents
begin while their children are still in high school. Why?
In some situations it is competition. For selective admission
schools, parents and students know that grade point averages
and test scores are not enough to be competitive in the college
application process. And so resumes are filled with a host
of extracurricular activities, accomplishments, awards, and
leadership positions.
In other cases, it is enrichment. The parents want to provide
their students with a multitude of opportunities. The array
of choices and commitments can keep a teen or young adult
busy 24/7. Typical school year schedules include academic
classes (and a push for honors or AP classes), school and
club sports, choir and/or band, private music/dance lessons,
theatre, and service learning projects, to name a few. During
the summer, student activities include camps, mission trips,
volunteer commitments, youth groups, internships, babysitting
and other part-time or summer jobs. Many of these activities
are an all or nothing proposition, requiring attendance at
all practices and related events, claiming time seven days
a week, and even holidays previously reserved as family time.
It is getting harder to for students to find the time to just
hang out with friends.
Students differ widely in their ability to handle an aggressive
schedule. How can parents be alert to signs that their children
are overscheduled? Here are six proactive steps to create
a healthy balance.
1. Stand back together and take a look at the whole picture.
Introduce the use of a weekly or monthly planner to block
out the time frames for activities. A monthly calendar or
year-at-a-glance laminated poster hung on the wall of their
room can also be effective planning tools - and handy reminders.
Using different colors for the varied types of activities
can help to visually organize their schedule. The trick is
not to put the start time only, but to realistically account
for the full time commitment expected to complete the goal.
When is your student tackling their academics? Getting started
at 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. is a key indicator that they are overscheduled!
2. Block out time for the true non-negotiables, like school,
homework and sleep.
The Mayo Clinic contends that most teens need about 9 hours
of sleep to be alert and attentive during the day. What pattern
are you seeing? Contrary to what you may hear, catching up
on sleep on the weekend does not undo the damage done during
the week. Lack of sleep results in fatigue, illness, poor
concentration, mood swings, irritability, and behavioral problems.
3. Teach your student to prioritize.
Do you see your child reacting to deadlines, or being in control
of their time? Deciding what activities to be involved in
hinges on establishing some kind of criteria. Help your children
learn to be strategic. Discuss why an activity may be important
- or not. Talking through this process, and putting it on
paper makes planning more concrete and reality-based. Students
can weigh their options more easily when they see it in black
and white. It is a challenge as many students prefer the extracurricular
involvements over their academics.
4. Make it okay to say no.
When an activity doesn't fit any more, reassure them that
it is perfectly acceptable to take it off the list. Remind
students of the benefits of balance and directing their energy
toward their most rewarding activities. Parents may also need
to come to terms with their child's decision to discontinue
an activity where the parents may have harbored dreams for
them.
5. Once decisions are made, encourage your student to
be fully involved.
Being involved in an activity that is meaningful and challenging
provides the highest level of satisfaction. It is what psychologist
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi describes as "flow", being
fully immersed in an activity with energized focus, involvement,
and success in doing the activity.
6. Ensure that there is sufficient time to allow for unstructured
downtime.
Students need unstructured downtime to be alone with their
thoughts. When students or parents can step away from the
busyness of their lives, they process life experiences, gain
insights, learn about themselves, and can see things from
a different perspective. Teach them to honor this reflection
time, and help them protect it to stay in balance.
© Copyright 2008, Career Vision. Article may be reprinted
with permission.
Direction.
Decisions. Satisfaction.
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