Kids urged to study less, sleep more
March 10, 2011 - 12:25PM
Stressed ... new documentary questions the value of pushing kids too hard.
Maybe kids don't have to take several extra-curricular classes, do hours of homework every night, excel at a sport or two, join a bunch of clubs - and then, of course, get into a top university - to be successful.
Maybe parents and teachers can let students discover what they enjoy and do well, then have them pursue that, instead of joining a bunch of activities just because they think it will look good on their college applications.
Across the nation, parents, teachers and kids may be ready to embrace the idea that kids can take many paths to success - if the popularity of the US education documentary Race to Nowhere is any indication.
Advertisement: Story continues below "There's a perception that there is a magical path, and there really isn't," said Laurie Lam, a mother of two in Thousand Oaks, California, where the film has been shown several times. "Competition is healthy, and hard work is healthy. But we need to think about how we do it."
In the documentary, several students talk about how miserable the pressure to succeed is making them. They talk about headaches, eating disorders, cheating, even suicide. Parents, too, talk about the stress that homework and over-scheduling puts on families.
Read the rest of the article here.
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Thursday, March 10, 2011
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