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Children and Sleep: Getting Your Baby to Sleep Like a Baby

December 12th, 2009

You’ve tried lullabies, rocking chairs, late night drives around the neighborhood and your baby still doesn’t sleep. At 3 a.m., your infant starts crying and won’t go back to sleep unless you bring him into bed with you. Your toddler gets up at 2 a.m. and turns on the TV— loud! Homework keeps your fifth grader awake past 10 p.m.And your teens are up until midnight and then sleeping through 8 AM algebra class.One Sleepless Child, One Tired FamilyWhen a child has sleep problems, parents— and even siblings— also suffer, both from sleep deprivation and worry.Children can suffer the same sleep disorders as adults. Snoring, sleep apnea, restless leg syndrome and other sleep disruptions in children have been linked to extreme moodiness, accidents, behavioral problems, learning disabilities and even Attention Deficit Hyper-activity Disorder (ADHD).What’s Keeping Your Child Awake at Night? Newborns (1-2 months): Babies are not born with a pre-set sleep-wake cycle— their tummies organize their schedules. Newborns sleep 10½ to 18 hours a day, usually one to three hours at a time and waking when they’re hungry. Infants (3-11 months): According to the National Sleep Foundation, “Circadian rhythms begin to develop at about six weeks, and by three to six months, most infants have a regular sleep-wake cycle.” Infants sleep 9-12 hours, including one to four naps. Toddlers (1-3 years): Toddlers have figured out that things happen at night, and they don’t want to miss out. They’re also mobile and can climb out of bed. They want their independence, but also want to be with their parents. So it’s tough to get toddlers to sleep the 12-14 hours— including one good nap— that they need every day. Preschoolers (3-5 years): Good-bye afternoon naps! Most five-year-olds are up all day and sleep 11-13 hours a night. Active imaginations can trigger more nightmares and fears about sleep. And of course, TV and playtime are much more appealing than going to bed. School-aged Children (5-12 years): Serious sleep problems can begin here. School kids are busy and barely have 10-11 hours for sleep. Computers, TV, and videogames— particularly those with violent content— are sleep distractions. Junk food, caffeine, and stress can also keep school-aged children up at night. Teens (13+): More work, more play, and more socializing combine with stress and biology to make it difficult for teens to get 8 ½ to 9 ¼ hours of sleep. “Circadian Rhythms change in adolescence,” says Jodi Mindell, Associate Director of the Sleep Disorders Center of Philadelphia. “Teens’ brains and bodies are geared to stay up later at night and sleep later in the day.” What Can Concerned (and Sleep-Deprived) Parents Do?Know your child and the guidelines for how much sleep they need at every age. Trust your judgment about what’s healthy for your child. Most importantly, help your children to establish good sleep habits early in life. Sure, you’ll struggle through the first few weeks with your newborn. But at 3-11 months, infants know the difference between day and night and are on a sleep cycle similar to their older siblings and parents. The are also ready to learn to go to bed and to sleep through the night. Remember, however, that helping you infant to do this will take time.What’s the Right Approach to Sleep Training?This depends on your baby and your lifestyle. Some experts say it’s good to comfort your child to get them back to sleep and to even bring the baby into the family bed if it means you will all get back to sleep. On the other hand, there’s the “self-soother” theory. You may have heard of Richard Ferber, director of the Center for Pediatric Sleep Disorders at Children’s Hospital in Boston and author of Solve Your Child’s Sleep Problems. His approach, dubbed “Ferberization,” is rooted in the American Academy of Pediatrics’ theory that babies sleep best when they soothe themselves to sleep. Ferber suggests a loving bedtime routine, putting the baby to sleep awake and waiting before responding when the baby wakes up crying.Rock-A-Bye Your Infant Develop a Bedtime Routine: The best nightly routines—bathing, feeding, calming and bonding—according to Laura Davis and Janis Keyser, authors of Becoming The Parent You Want To Be, are enjoyable for parent and child and should be consistent every night. Pediatrician Harvey Karp, author of The Happiest Baby, recommends the “Five Ss—swaddle, shush, swing, suck (a pacifier) and hold your baby while he or she is turned on his or her side or stomach.” All the experts agree on one thing: to learn to soothe themselves to sleep, infants should be put to bed when they’re drowsy, but not asleep. Create a safe, sleep-friendly environment: Keep the bedroom cozy, but not overheated, quiet and dark. Choose a crib with a good safety rating and firm mattress. Take precautions to reduce risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) by putting infants to sleep on their backs. Encourage sleep: If your infant wakes up at night, have a consistent response. If you pick up or feed your baby, always do it in the darkened bedroom. Your infant will respond to changes in light, and needs to know that nighttime is bedtime. You also need to decide if you will bring your baby into your bed, and stick to that decision. Know when it’s time to call the doctor: The National Sleep Foundation suggests that it’s time to call your pediatrician if your baby is consistently fussy, having breathing problems, snores loudly, or has daytime sleepiness and behavioral problems.

More Sleep tips at http://www.ezhealths.com

Puberty… at the age of three

December 2nd, 2009

“My daughter has had adult body odour since she was three years old. She’s six now and has begun to grow body hair under her armpits and in the pubic area. Her breasts are developing, she has mood swings and gets monthly stomach pains. ”

Mairi, web forum member

 

Paediatricians in Britain are noticing that children are going through puberty at an earlier age than ever. The average age for a girl to start her period is 10 years and six months, which means that increasing numbers of girls at primary school have the ability to conceive a child of their own.

Researchers have conducted studies that show that obesity has a direct influence on early onset puberty. Obese girls, who are at least 22 pounds overweight, have an 80 per cent chance of developing breasts before their ninth birthday. Also, experts say that early-onset puberty, or precocious puberty, could have lasting consequences both socially and medically, with a higher risk of teenage pregnancy, depression and cancer in later life.

Tam Fry, honorary chairman of the Child Growth Foundation and a member of the National Obesity Forum, explains why this tragic phenomenon is on the increase in the UK and what can be done to prevent it.

Q What can be done about early onset puberty?

“We have to stop children getting fat early. What happens is when the child becomes fat the hormone regulation increases because growth hormone is released on a metric volume basis. Therefore, the bigger you are, the more growth hormone is released.

 

“An obese person is taller than he or she would have been if left to natural growth, so this additional weight is causing children to go into puberty earlier than ever before.”

 

Q Is the problem affecting both girls and boys?

“It seems that this is hitting girls faster than boys, although in a sense it may be the same because boys tend to be unwilling to expose themselves, even to their parents. With a girl it’s more obvious because you see the breast budding and it can be picked up more easily, but that’s not to say that it isn’t happening with boys.”

 

Q What are the emotional consequences?

“Girls are going into pubertal tantrums at an age when they are least able to cope with them. This is tragic for the parents, because they have an eight year old behaving like a thirteen year old.

 

“Also, the disparity between what the child is feeling and what they understand must be hugely distressing.”

 

Q Could precocious puberty lead to an increase in teenage pregnancies?

“One of the real problems is you can have a child at primary school as well developed as a girl half way through her teens. She is far less likely to be able to fend off advances from a male. As a result, an increase in pregnancies among young girls is a real possibility.”

 

Q What can be done about the problem?

“We need to go back into schools not just to teach children to look after themselves but to teach children how to look after their children. This goes right back into pregnancy and preconception. Parents are weaning too early and relying too much on processed foods for babies.”

 

“If we had a better monitoring system in this country, which is something the Child Growth Foundation has been campaigning for, we would maybe catch these girls before the whole thing becomes a disaster.”

 

Q What should parents do if they think their child is experiencing early onset puberty?

 

“Go straight to your GP and ask for an immediate referral to a paediatric endocrinologist. It is possible to slow down the advancement into puberty with medication.”

 

Q Is there enough sex education in schools?

 

“No. Children aged four and five are being taught about finance in schools now, but they should also be taught about sexual development and reproduction at an earlier age.

 

“There are a lot of people who believe that sex education will exacerbate the problem, but education is everything. Once you have education then the majority of people, if it’s taught in the correct way, will treat it with respect and be in a much better position to know what is going on.

 

“I have real hopes that the autumn launch of the Start4Life tranche of the government’s Change4Life programme will highlight to parents the importance of breast-feeding for longer and a good, healthy diet for babies.

 

“From early indications, the Change4Life programme also appears to be looking in the right areas, such as the importance of eating five portions of fresh fruit and veg per day, portion control, 60-minutes of exercise a day for children and replacing sugary or fatty foods with more healthy options.”

 

Getting help

Child Growth Foundation, tel: 020 8995 0257; www.childgrowthfoundation.org; info@childgrowthfoundation.org

 

For more articles on family life and education, visit www.tom-brown.com

 

 

Gail Dixon is the editor of http://www.tom-brown.com – a guide that helps parents choose a school in the UK
http://www.rocketspanishorbust.com

Girls Boarding Schools: The only Solution

December 1st, 2009

July 24th, 2006 ,Teenage rebellion can be a sign of health, especially in girls. In an essay contributed to Catching a Wave: Reclaiming Feminism for the 21st Century, Nancy Gruver has written that girls are understandably outraged by injustices. However, the process of socialization teaches girls to swallow their healthy anger. Unfortunately, then, the anger that could fuel needed change in our society is misspent. It gets turned inward as self-destructive choices, or girls express it, ineffectively, in blind rebellion.

Girls who are troubled are often the brightest and most sensitive. They either learn too well what society seems to want from them (such as sexual precociousness or underachievement) or they simply refuse to go along with the unfairness. These girls challenge us to find healthier ways to educate them to be contributors to a more just society.

Exhausted parents are torn between advocating for their girls and wishing their girls would “just go along and get along” in school settings that trample their self-esteem. While a family’s love and concern can do much to build resiliency in their girls, no single family is strong enough to protect its daughters from the effects of a “girl-poisoning” culture. If only we could train girls to use their energies to correct injustice in the world, rather than being self-destructive.

We can. One way to do that is to educate girls in an environment prepared especially to focus on girls – their needs, development, strengths and talents, and the way they learn. Girls boarding schools is just this type of environment

For instance, one girl was used to hearing boys yell, “Cat fight!” whenever girls disagreed with each other in class. When she transferred to an all-girls school, she found that girls were encouraged to debate, to speak their minds, and think through their opinions. No longer shut down by the boys’ teasing (which went on right in front of teachers) she developed her thinking and communication skills.

This effect is strengthened even more in girl’s boarding schools, where girls live in a girl-centered world 24/7. Many parents find that boarding schools give their daughters a more positive set of peers, so that peer pressure work for girls, instead of against them. Instead of feeling pressure to experiment with sex and drugs, girls feel challenged to be the best they can be.

For many parents finding out that their son or daughter has been struggling with teen drug abuse is a catastrophic revelation. Thoughts of failure, disappointment, guilt, and embarrassment flood a parents mind. However, you must remember that you are not the only parent to face such a situation. And more importantly, many families have overcome teen drug abuse in the past.
Many of them itself creates ideal conditions for the development of troubled teens, because it have proven that such teenagers have underdeveloped front part of the main brain, which makes it difficult for them to determine right from wrong. Many believe that troubled teens are product of the society they live in. But as it was already mentioned, it is most likely a combination of reasons that make teens troubled.
I realize it is not easy to deal with the fear of the unknown, however sometimes the fear can be worse than the situation. If you have trouble managing your anxiety of the future, then go to:

http://www.abundantlifeacademy.com/
http://www.troubledteens4jesus.com
http://www.troubledteenministries.com

Abundantlifeacademy It is a school for troubled teens that have a great deal of academic potential and a good heart, yet they are currently off track, lost, and wandering in the desert (selfish, ungrateful, and lazy)… in need of immediate infusion of God’s precious Spirit and a restored relationship with Jesus Christ (selfless, thankful, and motivated to excel).

They can be of great help. This site is a comprehensive directory or Resources for Troubled Teens and their families. If you are looking for more information on troubled teens, whether you are a parent of a troubled teen, an educational consultant, or a professional who serves the needs of troubled teens.

Teen Community, a Second Home Online

November 24th, 2009

A teen wants to explore various issues related to teenagers such as friends and family, dating and relationship, teen sexuality, teen celebrity, fashion, food and health, teen health, sports and education, debates, advice and other related topics, and all of these are found in a teen community. If a teenager cannot get information from his parents for obvious reasons, he can always go to the teen community.

A teen community allows a teenager to enjoy a safe, fun life experiences with other teens all over the world. Thanks to advance technology, it is now possible for a teenager to interact with his peers, others he know but most he only sees in pictures and videos. If distance has barred teenagers from knowing other teens and relate to them their dreams, thanks to the teen community, teenagers now has unlimited resources to know the lives of other teenagers from various lands and cultures.

A teen community can be accessed online. What a teenager does is visit the site, register, fill in the required information, login and viola, the other teens are within his reach.

The teen community, in living up to its principle as a second home, has set regulations to police the teens and impose parental guidance. The internet is a dangerous medium if teenagers are given unlimited access to sites which are deplorable and not suited to them. This is where the teen community can assure the parents that it guides the teenagers in sharing their experiences and making their own choices in the most healthy and wholesome manner.

A Teen Community sets out rules which must be followed by the members, and a violation of these rules causes the members to be banned or suspended. A member of the teen community has to respect the rights and culture of fellow members. Teenagers have customs that are different from each other and respect is a must. Some teen communities allow photos to be shared, while others prohibit this. In most cases, the actual personal information such as home address and phone numbers cannot be given. The essence is to avoid the interaction to become too personalized. Giving information of other members is not also allowed in respect to the privacy of others.

A teen wants to communicate and writing is one of the best media. A teen community ensures that all contents, communication, and behavior are within “PG” guidelines. Vulgar language, nudity, depictions of sex and strong violence are prohibited Harassment in whatever form is not allowed. By harassment we mean communicating or behaving in an offensive, intimidating or threatening way towards the other members of the community. This is noteworthy because it helps the teenagers develop a wholesome personality while in the teen community.

Although debates and discussions are encouraged in a teen community, these must be done within the rules. Teens are informed that debates must be on issues, and never on personalities.

The allowable age in a Teen Community is ages 13 to 17 only, although some are for 18 years old and over. Most teen communities allow the visits of some adults purposely to help the teenagers such as leading educational projects and counseling.

Much to the good things that Teen Communities offer to the children, there is still no place like home. Parents must always provide the environment of sharing, respect, trust and love that a teen wants. After all, no agency, not even the teen community, has more responsibilities than the parents.

Author’s bio:
Teenagers are really more meticulous these days. This is why TeenWants (<a href="http://www.teenwants.com)” rel=”nofollow”>http://www.teenwants.com) hopes to bring teens all around the world together and let them experience everything positive and enriching. Sushil Kumar Singh Raghav writes for TeenWants.com. TeenWants.com is the place for games, video, music, shopping, fitness, entertainment and even job opportunities for teens. Check out TeenWants.com (<a href="http://www.teenwants.com)” rel=”nofollow”>http://www.teenwants.com) for prizes and games as well!
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