ChatterBank0 min ago
Another Example From The School Of The Bleeding Obvious ?
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/he alth-23 223751
Not putting your kids to bed at the proper time isn't good for them apparently...well, well, well ...who would have thought of it !
Not putting your kids to bed at the proper time isn't good for them apparently...well, well, well ...who would have thought of it !
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No best answer has yet been selected by mikey4444. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think that is half the problem Lottie. Some parents with children at the extreme ends of the scale will feel the need to conform but in fact should listen to their children too.
And it is the two way communication that could be lacking in these families highlighted in the study. Which leads to all sorts of other issues.
The vast majority of kids in the middle of the bell curve will get enough sleep and perform averagely.
You can make stats work for anything :-)
And it is the two way communication that could be lacking in these families highlighted in the study. Which leads to all sorts of other issues.
The vast majority of kids in the middle of the bell curve will get enough sleep and perform averagely.
You can make stats work for anything :-)
Same here really, they are at school all day and then in the garden for 4 hours on the trampoline, slide and swing, running around with the cat and the dog and playing at various bits and bobs, then they are knackered and ready for bed.
They might turn out thick, but at least they had fun getting there!
They might turn out thick, but at least they had fun getting there!
The researchers themselves are aware of the possible confounding factors. The lead researcher actually mentions this in the article, going to explain that they have controlled for confounding factors as best they can.
So - an element of uncertainty to the result, not least because they will have been reliant on imperfect or biased recall from parents, but certainly indicative. And plausible too. Sleep is important, especially when you are growing.
So - an element of uncertainty to the result, not least because they will have been reliant on imperfect or biased recall from parents, but certainly indicative. And plausible too. Sleep is important, especially when you are growing.
When me and my brother were kids, we always had a set bad time (can't remember the time now, but it was about 7.30). Not so bad in the winter when it was dark, but hell in the summer when all the other kids were still playing out ! I think kids today stay up way too late, but I also think 7.30 was a bit early.
when we were little it was probably the same around 7-7.30 time,
i used to grouch like mad when woken at whatever time in the evening if there was a party, as we were whisked off to the neighbours, or relative, great for the adults having their knees up, not so much fun for us. loaded down with coats in someone else's bed, yuck.
i used to grouch like mad when woken at whatever time in the evening if there was a party, as we were whisked off to the neighbours, or relative, great for the adults having their knees up, not so much fun for us. loaded down with coats in someone else's bed, yuck.
Good fun though when there were other children also staying and we were all the the same bedroom in the beds loaded down with coats! I don't think visitors are invited to put coats on beds any more and shown to the bathroom. I suppose most coats are left in cars Em and in our days there were few of them about. Some of those heaps of coats were ginormous!
Anyway, I don't think any of us kids actually slept very much.
Anyway, I don't think any of us kids actually slept very much.
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