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

Busy is not better for my family. There is a balance that can be achieved between the two. Each child in my family may have one - two activities outside of our active church life- which in my opinion is the piece of the puzzle missing for many.

We signed up for music lessons and rotated through different sports - soccer, basketball, tee-ball, swim team, indoor soccer, karate, gymnastics, yoga, and asked our children what they wanted to try out and do...also brownies and then girl scouts. It was fun. We discussed what we liked and what each child did not want to do got dropped at the end of that session.
Its important to learn how to swim so we pressed for this and they liked swimming and became snorklers and then scuba divers...

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My 11 and 12 year old are NOT scheduled to death! We allow only two activities at a time; right now that is music lessons and scouts. We allow very little TV viewing (only educational) and eat dinner as a family every night. We have ample time to play together, talk and share. My kids are able to explore their own creativity which I encourage. They read a lot and explore the world around them. I am so very proud of them. They are excellent students...

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I think the level of "busy" is the point here. There is busy and there is an overwhelming, exhausting level of busy. Organized activities are wonderful for the children and I don't think anyone is blasting parents for signing their children up for after-school events. It's the number of activities that's important...

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I agree and disagree. I think many times you really talk to your kids when you're shuttling them back and forth to activities. Plus, I always stayed and watched (baseball, gymnastics, track, whatever). I think that tells your kids they are important to you, and that you support them. However, you still have to find some time for family time. If that means limiting each child to a certain number of activities, so be it.

Thank you for providing a different view point on a very hot topic right now. I think each family needs to decide what is best for them and base their scheduling decisions on their child's personality and ability to handle multiple activities. I am on both sides of the fence. On one hand, I am a stay at home mom that appreciates the ability to live a slow life if we choose...

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I think busy is fine. You can tell if you child is over-scheduled. In our family, it works well for us. My daughter is an only-child(not by choice), and I have MS. By letting her do the things she loves to do with other kids, and coaches with the energy level she needs, she is much more content to come home with me to read or play a quiet game. Though I am white, my husband is Chinese, and all of my nieces were heavily scheduled...

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I think Dr. Joshua Coleman is full of it. It's true that some families are working harder to have quality time together but from simply observing other families - no they are not closer. Parents today are more concerned about being their kid's friend or being the cool parent so in effect, they back off so as not to be overbearing...

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Curious to see other's comments. My ex-husband and I have opposite views. Just as the adults of this society are in a Rat Race, in my opinion we are doing the same to our children. We work 50 weeks a year...get two weeks vacation. Some have to bring even their work home. We are often over-worked, over-stressed, and under-paid...not just monetarily, but with very little vacation...time to enjoy life and our families...

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I agree with the author provided the activities are well-rounded. As a society I am noticing we are so involved with our immediate core family that we leave no time to give to our communities and build/spend time with friends. I also believe rest and downtime is often time dismissed alowing us to miss out on the simple pleasures in life. Balance is key.

I think that balance is key. I think that involving kids in activities is good, so long as we don't go overboard. Children need that down time where they can just be kids and learn to use their imaginations, and dream up whatever their hearts desire. Many children feel stress because they are overscheduled and that's just not okay...

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Too busy to give a full answer! Quick thoughts are that being busy is fine, as long as everyone remains happy and balanced. If the reason for your packed schedule is to offer opportunities and enjoyment to your children then you are on the right track. If you are trying to create "superkids" and therefore yourself as a "supermom/dad" then the balance is off. When the balance is gone the consequences can be dire as discussed in the documentary movie Race to Nowhere (www.racetonowhere.com).

My husband and I made a very conscious choice to not over schedule our sons' lives. School comes first and any activity that interferes with homework or school extra-curricular ideas isn't done. Second comes religious school, until our boys are 13 and have completed their studies. So, as long as basketball, soccer, martial arts and skiing don't interfere with those two things, AND we can afford the activity in terms of time and money, we'll do it. Otherwise, we don't--guilt free...

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I think it totally depends on the kid(s)/family. It has become very clear to us that our kids are happier when we stay home and do a fun activity as a family (play catch, a board game or watch a movie)than when we run around to this practice and that game. BUT, I know several families that stay very busy running kids here and there and they all seem happy and well-adjusted. I just know it does not work well for our family...

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My kids are busy with several activites but I try to keep their schedules so they are home doing nothing for 2 nights a week - so I try to moderate it a bit. But I agree with this article - the kids have fun dancing, playing their instruments, basketball, etc - I find that it has made them happy (social connections) and more organized from a time-management point of view...

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