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

I think the kids should let you know what it is that makes them feel happy,content and centered and then you can feed off of their decisions and support them in everything they do!Take time out to breathe from the hectic Lifestyles of a bzy schedule,but I think if you are envolved in a lot of stuff,then always take time for yourself & eachother's needs at each given moment!Feel blessed for our kids and selves to feel so content w/ our Lives and have the opportunity to adventure,experience and learn with everything they are envolved in and enjoy and saviour every moment shared!Take the time to be a family,whatever you are doing at the time!

I agree that children need to do some activities but there needs to be a balance, not having anything is bad but over doing is bad too. Usually parents have to pick them, so in any way they stay connected with parents and in the same time building their self- esteem and social skills by these activities.

I read the blog supporting that less is more for kids when it comes to packed schedules, so this was a nice balance. My children are 3 and 5, so I tend to agree with the former. I love having the freedom on a Wednesday to decide to have a playdate, go to the aquarium, or fill the backyard pool with water and turn on sprinklers. We had a pirate treasure hunt a few weeks ago, complete with costumes, maps we drew and homemade treasure chests...

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I find it interesting that the studies surveyed the parents but not the children. Older teens are more than capable of addressing the issues and providing insight as to how they were affected.

I let my kids choose whether they want to be involved or not. Both my 8 & 12 year old have choosen to skip a year/season for one sport or another at different times. But unfortunately for the most part they love to be involved in everything. We rarely have an open evening and most nights mom has one kid in some town and dad has the other child in another town. At this point I am more fearful for my marriage than for my kids, it's already starting to show signs of wear.

Yes to moderation, NO to over-scheduling not being a problem today. My kids 16, 13, 10, & 5 do some scheduled activities but get plenty of home and downtime. They like to have friends over and I can tell you many of their friends are unhappy with the amount of scheduled activities their parents have them in. They love to hang out at our house and would do so more often if their schedules allowed...

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"Busy is Better" ?! Please. Can we stop judging other parents' choices as inferior just because they're different, and trying to justify our own parenting choices by parading our pet experts? And what's with citing the responses of parents who use an online scheduling site as if that's a representative sample of the whole parenting cohort?! OF COURSE those people are going to say their way is better...

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We are so quick to judge parenting style. I say, "To each their own." Some say all the scheduling is bad, so they SCHEDULE free time. Some say kids that are over-scheduled are bored and don't know how to entertain themselves. Yet as a child I was rarely scheduled and very bored, didn't "know" how to entertain myself. Some say the schedules bring order and broaden a child's horizons. Some say the scheduling does entertain and helps the kids find interests...

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I think this article tries to oversimplify things. There's way more spectrum than is presented here.
Busy, scheduled kids can be involved intensely in 1 or 2 activities or spread out over many things. Parents can be involved or not. Parents may be supportive or putting undo pressure on a kid. The child might be choosing the activities or a parent might be pushing them into something. Some of these things are positive, some negative...

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I think part of the problem with over-scheduling is not the activities themselves, it is the disconnect the children have with the natural world and the ability to self-regulate when they *don't* have anything on their schedule. The other posters are right - there has to be a happy medium. And you have to know your own child. There is no one right way to raise or parent a child.

Activities can be good. It's the term "busy" that I have a problem with. We all use it all the time and it implies that we have too much to do. Do families make time to sleep in? To have unplanned days? To RELAX? I worry that being busy prevents us from really connecting to each other. Remember, cheering at a game or going to a recital is certainly positive, but it is about our kids performing, not opening up. That seems takes incidental, unplanned time to happen...

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Kids who have something to do every night are disconnected from their families. I also believe in a balance. We only do one sport a season and we try to have a family dinner the majority of the week. Even though I am sitting watching my kids practice or at their games, it is not the same as quality time where we are all at home playing together. I also feel that unstructured time at home forces the kids to use their imagination...

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I think it depends on the child. Growing up, I was in dance, softball, violin lessons, swim lessons, soccer, tennis, ice skating, track, piano lessons - you name it, I probably played it at one time. As I got older and realized that not all kids were as involved in activities as I was, I thought, wow, I'm was a really lucky kid to get to experience all that. I even told my mom that one day in high school...

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I teach school and I agree with the comments about how kids today can't entertain themselves. I did a lot of activities when I was a child but even though I danced, was a girl scout, took craft lessons, sang in the church choir, was a Job's daughter,was in theater, and took part in school activities, none of those activities took all of my time. When I put my own children into activities all of those activities required so much time we weren't able to do anything else...

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I couldn't agree more with all the parents who have already commented...It seems there are a lot of smart one's out there. The all care about:
1. balancing activity with creative free time/down time
2. making time to help the family bond and connect
3. paying attention to their individual child's needs.

Bravo parents!
Let me add one more thought:
There is a difference between scheduled activities that the whole family goes to and scheduled activities that you just "drop your kid off" at...

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