Wednesday, 15 October 2008 07:38 pm
Member name:   Password:   
home
about us
register online
nz education
articles
international
kids & parents
links
faq
contact
NCEA subject resources
04 Oct 2008
More Youth Apprenticeships
21 Sep 2008
One Stop Career Shop
15 Sep 2008
Safety and accountability
14 Sep 2008
UCOL Nursing
08 Sep 2008
Electronic text books
07 Sep 2008
Success is a State of Mind
07 Sep 2008
Praises for literacy numeracy
31 Aug 2008
Kristin Sounds High Definition
26 Aug 2008
TEC Board Appointments
20 Aug 2008
More articles...
 
Reactivate Your Child
06 Oct 2008
Theories of Dyslexia
29 Sep 2008
Librarians online
02 Sep 2008
Brain Food
02 Sep 2008
PhD Scholarship
27 Jul 2008
Asperger making sense
18 Jul 2008
Websites for youth
15 Jul 2008
Good Literacy Start to School
13 Jul 2008
"I have a Dream"�
30 Jun 2008
Picking Up the Pace
12 May 2008
More articles...
 
Adult Education Area
Apprenticeships
Associations/Orgs
Behaviour
Distance Education
English Second Language
General NZ Educ
Gifted/Talented Ed
Home Schooling.
ICT
Maori
Parents + Families
Pre-school Info.
Primary/Intermediate Schools
Profess Development
Scholarships
Secondary Schools
Special Education.
Teaching
Tertiary
Research
More articles...
 
  edusearch articles
You are here > Sections > Parents + Families > Reactivate Your Child

print this article

Reactivate Your Child  
Author : GKA







Created : 06 Oct 2008
Last Revision : 06 Oct 2008

 Reactivate Your Child


ImageThe key to activating kids is to turn off the TV and redirect their attention. Reducing TV from more than 20 hours a week (the average for a New Zealand kid) to 7 can cut a child's obesity risk by one third.


Be sure you balance TV and computer time with active time. You might want to start by initiating "No TV T-days" or Game nights (where the whole family plays board and card games and goes for a long walk or bike ride before or after(Tuesday and Thursday). Just as you set a time for homework, set a time for play/exercise. This should come before TV time. Be a role model by making time to exercise as a family or by yourself.


Personally I like to employ a covert strategy here. By making exercise more appealing than TV (i.e. making a child believe it is more enticing). This can be achieved by:



  • Role modelling (having your own goal of running a half marathon in 6 months time) - make it sound fun to your child and they will eventually bike along side you. Ask them to be your coach and get them to make you a chart you can stick on the fridge with gold stars - they can reward you for exercise, at the same time they are exercising too and thus giving you a double payoff!!! Also your own TV watching habits rub off on your children - be seen to be active and your children will follow.
  • Going on walks where the goal at the end is to go to the zoo (where you can walk around it too!) or go to the beach to dig up buried treasure - don't let your imagination limit you here.... Its not too silly to be a pirate for the day if it gets your child active does it?
  • Pretend that you and your child are part of a cycling team training for the Olympics....
  • There is literally so much I could talk about here its exhausting, I believe that a children's imagination lives in all of us – just tap into that and you will find thousands of fun ideas….. just make sure you find that time!
  • The more you draw your child away from TV and video games the more they will forget they exist. Why would you watch a TV programme when you had forgotten the story line and who the characters are!

For more information visit


http://www.getkidsactive.com/component/option,com_frontpage/Itemid,1/

Comments on this article:  

Need help? call on (09) 4730034 or fax (09) 4737034
EduSearch.co.nz © 2001 | advertise | legal | privacy | site maintained by Virtusoft Ltd.