Wednesday, June 11, 2014

My Fidgety Kid

WHERE was this article when J was little??  This is one of the main reasons we started homeschooling.  She was fidgety and chatty and the teachers wanted her on Ritalin.  I could scream now thinking about it.  J was bubbly and happy and eager and curious and full of life before she started school.   Schools killed her love of learning, killed her self-esteem, and turned her into just a sad shell of who she was - all by the time she was 6 years old.  Thank God for homeschooling.  I'm so glad I got her out of there before any more damage was done.  I'm glad I listened to my gut instead of teachers who thought they were experts on my kid.  I'm so glad she got to have a rich, full, happy childhood which included a whole lot of running outside in the sunshine.  And most importantly I'm so glad that, after only a few months of homeschooling, I got my bubbly, happy, eager, curious, full of life daughter back (and yes, she's still like that!).  

WHY CHILDREN FIDGET: And what we can do about it
Angela Hanscom - Thursday, June 05, 2014
A perfect stranger pours her heart out to me over thphone. She complains that her six-year-old son is unable to sit still in the classroom. The school wants to test him for ADHD (attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder). This sounds familiar, I think to myself. As a pediatric occupational therapist, I’ve noticed that this is a fairly common problem today.
The mother goes on to explain how her son comes home every day with a yellow smiley face. The rest of his class goes home with green smiley faces for good behavior. Every day this child is reminded that his behavior is unacceptable, simply because he can’t sit still for long periods of time.
The mother starts crying. “He is starting to say things like, ‘I hate myself’ and ‘I’m no good at anything.’” This young boy’s self-esteem is plummeting all because he needs to move more often.
Over the past decade, more and more children are being coded as having attention issues and possibly ADHD. A local elementary teacher tells me that at least eight of her twenty-two students have trouble paying attention on a good day. At the same time, children are expected to sit for longer periods of time. In fact, even kindergarteners are being asked to sit for thirty minutes during circle time at some schools.
The problem: children are constantly in an upright position these days. It is rare to find children rolling down hills, climbing trees, and spinning in circles just for fun. Merry-go-rounds and teeter-totters are a thing of the past. Recess times have shortened due to increasing educational demands, and children rarely play outdoors due to parental fears, liability issues, and the hectic schedules of modern-day society. Lets face it: Children are not nearly moving enough, and it is really starting to become a problem.
I recently observed a fifth grade classroom as a favor to a teacher. I quietly went in and took a seat towards the back of the classroom. The teacher was reading a book to the children and it was towards the end of the day. I’ve never seen anything like it. Kids were tilting back their chairs back at extreme angles, others were rocking their bodies back and forth, a few were chewing on the ends of their pencils, and one child was hitting a water bottle against her forehead in a rhythmic pattern.
This was not a special needs classroom, but a typical classroom at a popular art-integrated charter school. My first thought was that the children might have been fidgeting because it was the end of the day and they were simply tired. Even though this may have been part of the problem, there was certainly another underlying reason.
We quickly learned after further testing, that most of the children in the classroom had poor core strength and balance. In fact, we tested a few other classrooms and found that when compared to children from the early 1980s, only one out of twelve children had normal strength and balance. Only one! Oh my goodness, I thought to myself. These children need to move!
Ironically, many children are walking around with an underdeveloped vestibular (balance) system today--due to restricted movement. In order to develop a strong balance system, children need to move their body in all directions, for hours at a time. Just like with exercising, they need to do this more than just once-a-week in order to reap the benefits. Therefore, having soccer practice once or twice a week is likely not enough movement for the child to develop a strong sensory system.
Children are going to class with bodies that are less prepared to learn than ever before. With sensory systems not quite working right, they are asked to sit and pay attention. Children naturally start fidgeting in order to get the movement their body so desperately needs and is not getting enough of to “turn their brain on.” What happens when the children start fidgeting? We ask them to sit still and pay attention; therefore, their brain goes back to “sleep.”
Fidgeting is a real problem. It is a strong indicator that children are not getting enough movement throughout the day. We need to fix the underlying issue. Recess times need to be extended and kids should be playing outside as soon as they get home from school. Twenty minutes of movement a day is not enough! They need hours of play outdoors in order to establish a healthy sensory system and to support higher-level attention and learning in the classroom.
         In order for children to learn, they need to be able to pay attention. In order to pay attention, we need to let them move.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a great article! I've never seen this take on the issue. My daughter (now 9) was affected by school the same way as your daughter and we pulled her from Kindergarten a nervous wreck. She was born with a disease that affected her development so she had been in special preschool prior to K but they just threw her into the elementary school ocean with uncaring teachers and uninterested therapists. Took us months to get this formerly book loving child to even look at a book again without freaking out.

We had her privately evaluated further and found big problems with visual and auditory processing. They were yelling at her to listen and comply when the real problem is that she really couldn't understand what she was hearing or seeing. Nice.

She also deals with hypotonia. She also has sensory processing disorder (maybe not fitting that anymore I don't know) from the disease and does NOT stop moving. I try hard to make sure she can move throughout her lessons and gets a lot of breaks. She's gifted but her poor working memory from her chronic illness is a huge hurdle that she jumps.

She continues to improve and a pro told me that if I wasn't already homeschooling that she would have recommended it. The pro says that tests show that she is learning and the pro says that she usually doesn't see this in similar kids attending public school because they're totally lost and getting no one-on-one help.

I do have one question for you. We're in upstate NY and for my daughter's testing we recently spent some time in NYC (we grew up on Long Island but it had been a while. Wowza!) How the heck do you find space to let your kid move in NYC? Central park? A gym?

We moved upstate mostly to get a larger yard and home to accommodate our daughter's needs. I'm really curious about this. My husband keeps getting nice job offers in NYC which we hope we won't have to accept but might have to. I love the resources there and it would be great for our daughter intellectually but the space thing is a huge question! I was impressed that she handled the massive sensory assault from the streets of the city. That would not have been possible in the past. How I did is a different story!

NYCitymomx3 said...

It's so great that you knew to homeschool in Kindergarten. Congratulations on doing an amazing job.

About the space situation - we don't live in Manhattan, we live in Queens which is much more residential. We have a backyard a block full of kids, and a big playground 2 blocks away. There are also countless other parks and playgrounds we can walk or drive 15 minutes to. Plus, my dd has been a busy dancer since forever, taking 3-4 hours of classes several days a week. My fidgety kid got plenty of opportunities to move. :)

Anonymous said...

Thanks for posting. Great Article.