Photo by: PNA

Busy is Better: Debunking the Over-Scheduled Myth

Photo by: PNA

Current wisdom says that flooding kids’ schedules with extracurricular activities like sports practices, music lessons and art classes, may not allow any time for kids to be kids, but are today’s so called “hyper-parents” really doing anything wrong?

Determined to provide their children with all of the opportunities their calendars and checkbooks can bear, today’s parents, who just a few years ago were urged to sign their kids up for everything, are now being scolded for doing precisely that. The pace of over-full schedules is damaging American children. Busy is bad. The blades of helicopter parents must be clipped and calendars emptied so everyone could return to the slower, simpler, happier times of the past. But do “simpler times” really exist? In theory it’s a nice image of everyone linking arms and singing around the piano, but who really does that? The best family moments come unexpectedly and are just as likely to come when everyone is together at some kid event.

Many experts also believe that busy isn’t bad. In fact, busy is good and perhaps, busy is even better for families. In 2006 Yale psychologist Joseph Mahoney looked at 2,100 5- to 18-year-olds and concluded that the more time kids spent in organized activities, the better their grades, the higher their self-esteem and the richer their relationships with their parents. Even kids who spent more than 20 hours a week in activities did not suffer, he said. (Mahoney, J.S., Harris, A.L., & Eccles, J.S. Organized Activity Participation, Positive Youth Development, and the Over-Scheduling Hypothesis. Social Policy Report, 20(4). The Over-Scheduling Myth)

Dr. Joshua Coleman from the Council on Contemporary Families says that kids today are actually closer to their parents than in past generations. He cautions against revisionist history – reminding families that parents today (both married and single) are spending more time teaching, caring and playing with their kids than parents did in the supposed golden age of the family in the 1950s/1960s. He adds that “kids really do feel the investment and sense of care that their parents are putting into them.”

And in return, parents feel fortunate to be able to provide a range of opportunities for their kids (many they didn’t have growing up). Just last month, Cozi.com, a free online service providing tools for busy families to manage the chaos of daily life, surveyed more than 200 of its users to find out how they feel their current schedules are impacting their children and family relationships. Sixty-eight percent of Cozi’s users reported that they feel happy about their children’s level of activity. Another 88 percent responded that, by involving their kids in a variety of different activities, they are providing opportunities for growth and development, increasing self-esteem, and expanding their social circles.

For the cynics who claim that a busy schedule equates to a disconnected family, it actually may achieve just the opposite with families making a more conscious effort to stay connected when the calendar is full. Despite everyone going in different directions, scheduled activities can allow parents and children to come together and enjoy the best aspect of life.

What do you think — is busy better for YOUR family?

Jenny Deam is a freelance journalist. Romi Lassally is a busy Mother of three and a contributing Cozi Editor.

Editor’s Note: This post was sponsored by Cozi, Family life. Simplified.

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93 Comments

Very good points. I would add that what you are busied about and balance are important to our family. I like to call my kids AAA, academic, athletic and artistic. These can be Renisannce times that families enjoying together.

I think just the opposite. All the families I know that have over scheduled lives are doing badly. The kids are not doing well in school and they are stressed when something comes up from out of no where. I think there needs to be a balance... not having anything is bad but over doing it is bad... how much commitment are you really giving your family if you have something going on every night?!?

My kids are teenagers. I kept them busy and out of trouble when they were in elementary and middle school. Now they keep themselves busy and out of trouble in high school. They are at after school music activities until 5 or 6 most nights. Before they could drive, I'd pick them up. Now - they drive themselves and THAT is very very nice. We are still very connected as a family. We have a family dinner when they get home...

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I disagree with this article. Kids today have no idea how to entertain themselves. They constantly look to their parents to entertain them and provide an activity. I think overscheduling kids makes parents feel better, not the kids. The article even states that parents feel fortunate thay they could provide their children with more opportunities than they had. I have heard so many kids say they wished they didnt have to do "X" activity but their parents were making them do it...

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Aristotle said "everything in moderation." I try to book us "half" the time, allowing my daughter the rest of the time for free play.

I believe there should be a balance. Kids should partake in various scheduled activities to help broaden their knowledge and experiences. However, they also need some down time, to relax and play on their own schedule.

I think "the effort to stay connected" is the key here. Every family dynamic is different. And the individuals in the family are different, having different needs. One child may thrive on lots of extra curricular activities while another may thrive in academics. One may love a constant pace, the other may need more downtime. Staying connected and not pressuring our children to excel simply to keep up with the Jones' is what's important...

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The question posed as to who sits around a piano as a family and plays and sings? We do. We (my husband, daughter, son, and I) make it a point to have the family time together. No TV, no video games (not that we have any), and like even playing some Badminton sometimes. So there are some of us that enjoy that "old fashioned" family time. We like the idea of keeping with the "good ol' days."

My son is too young for this to apply, but I am sure this is different for everyone. There's the extreme as presented in "Nation of Wimps" and then there is the opposite where children don't get enough access to the world around them. I don't think anyone is looking for the 50's, but the 70's and 80's allowed more freedom and a variety of activities without hovering parents connected by the cell phone umbilical cord. This article talks about parents surveyed - not the kids...

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I think that balance is key in everything that we do. I don't want my life to feel "busy" and I don't want my life to feel "slow" either. I do think we all need some down time to let our minds wander and conversations just happen while we sip lemonade and stare at the garden. We also need structure and group activities to help us learn responsiblilty and cooperation. Sometimes a well rounded individual cannot be measured by a "study".

Once again, this is an attempt to find a one-size-fits all way of raising children. Parents need to know their children because the children are the ones who really determine what is over-scheduling. Parents should be able to provide as many opportunities as possible, but they also need to be able to sense from their children when it is too much. Listening to what "experts" have to say is important and can inform decisions, but the bottom line is that you have to know your own kid!

This is an article that promotes scheduling by a group that offers scheduling material for your computer. Seems a little too obvious, to me :)

While a busy schedule can be great for building social skills and self-esteem, this may contribute to the loss of some other skills. A good friend, who was a teacher for 25 years, told me that she saw a gradual loss of skills in her grade school students that included the inability to think creatively and develop one's own game plan...

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The problem with busy schedules is that parents often ignore the signs of overload from their own children. While some children thrive on multiple extra-curricular commitments, others require more time for lone pursuits, whether it is reading, playing in the backyard, or trying new activities in the privacy of their own homes. As a mother of six grown children, I can testify that all children are definitely not the same when it comes to scheduling!

I am the type person that accomplishes more under pressure - a busy schedule motivates me. Now that our youngest has finished high school, I am having more down time and I'm finding that even though I have more time I have less time.
Part of being a parent is motivating our children to do and be their best. I think there is a happy medium to all activities for children depending on their ages of course...

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