From SpongeBob to Bosch

A new article by Angeline Lillard and Jennifer Peterson in Pediatrics indicates that four year-olds have a difficult time focusing immediately after watching nine minutes of a fast-paced cartoon (i.e., SpongeBob SquarePants). You can read it here.

A recent article by Costas Karageorghis and David-Lee Pries in the Sport Journal describes ten years of research indicating that fast-paced music helps individuals increase the intensity and duration of physical activity.  You can read it here.

An unpublished account of my own wife’s behavior indicates that she cannot fall asleep to True Blood on HBO.

I mention these three separate observations to make this point:  the best paintings, sculptures, television programs, music, movies and other forms of mediated reality change the observer.  They motivate us to laugh, cry, reflect, or move.

Expecting that a good, fast-paced cartoon would doing anything but motivate kids to jump around is as absurd as expecting that an exhibit of the collected works of Hieronymus Bosch would motivate patrons to bake cupcakes.

We all want our children to focus, to concentrate, to be healthy and to use their abilities to the fullest.  Conflicting reports and “magic bullet” solutions only make this harder.  It is why I object to the tone of Lillard and Peterson’s article.  Banning fast-paced cartoons is not a panacea.  It will not guarantee improved academic performance, but being a parent might.

Kids need parents.   They need parents to create environments where success can happen.  According to Lillard and Peterson’s data (which I believe), this might mean not allowing our kids to watch fast-paced cartoons (or play high-energy videogames, or listen to fast-tempo music) before or during studies.  It might mean setting an appropriate environment, with the right lighting and sound, for sleep.  It also might mean using Tom and Jerry to motivate kids to move around and get that much-needed physical exercise.

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Let Grandpa Drive

Be honest. Do you worry about your kids’ safety when their grandparents, your parents, drive them places? Do you worry about your safety when your parents drive you places?

A little bit?

A lot?

One of my daughter’s grandparents drives like a New York City cab driver; all acceleration and breaking with no in-between. (I can write this even though they read this blog because I know he/she will think I am referring to one of the other three.)

But it is not just their behavior behind the wheel that frightens us, is it? Grandparents are horrible when it comes to seatbelts and child safety seats. After all, they did not need them when they were raising us, and we (the lucky survivors) turned out OK.

Well, fear no more!

A new study published in Pediatrics, my favorite academic journal, reveals that our kids are safer driving with their grandparents than they are driving with us. When their grandchildren are in the car, grandparents get into far fewer accidents than parents do when our children are in the car. Moreover, when there is an accident and children are in the car, children are twice as likely to be injured if they are riding with their parents than if they are riding with their grandparents.

I know. I was shocked, too. But the research is solid.

Before I let grandparents off of the hook too quickly, I would like to note that, when they are driving alone, people over the age of 60 are more likely to be involved in accidents than younger adults. Moreover, the study also found that children who drive with their grandparents are less likely to be optimally restrained.

The study’s authors conclude that grandparents adopt safer driving practices when their grandchildren are in the car, which is awesome. Our parents love our children, apparently more than they loved us.

If you let your kids’ grandparents drive your kids, do so with increased confidence and the warm feeling that comes from knowing how much they care about their grandchildren. Then check the safety belts.

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Toy Fair Fare

I recently was hired to work on a project with Neil Howe.  Along with his partner, William Straus, Neil coined the term “Millennials.”  More importantly, his work has contributed in a profound way to how we think about generations, their different proclivities, and their particular approaches to relationships.

As I went to Toy Fair yesterday, I was thinking about this.  In particular, I was thinking about Generation X and its relationship with its children.  After all, the toys at Toy Fair all are being marketed at the children of Gen Xers.

What does that mean?  To understand that, people who study generational differences tell us that we need to step back and look at how Gen Xers were raised.  Generation X is the progeny of working and divorced parents.   Under-parented, Generation X looks to create for its children the childhood it never had.  My observation and analysis of other data suggests that Gen Xers also are looking to relive some of that lost childhood.

So as I was walking through Toy Fair, I was looking for toys that:

  1. Promote interaction between children and adults
  2. Have multigenerational appeal

Two items that fit these criteria are Spot It! and Boom Whackers.

Spot It! is a new game from Blue Orange that takes some of the elements of the classic Go Fish, expands the paradigm, and presents it all in a colorful and portable package that Gen Xers can take with them for them and their children to play in restaurants, at the park, or anywhere the opportunity or need to play a game presents itself.  Blue Orange says it is for children 6 years-old and up, but believe me when I say that 4 and 5 year-olds will enjoy Spot It! as well.  Watch a demonstration of the game here:

Boomwhackers are tuned percussion tubes that create specific notes when struck.  If you are a Gen Xer, and you want your kid to play along as you strum through a U2 medley, just give him or her those tubes that are in the key of the songs you are playing.  Once he or she understands the joy of making you music, you can introduce the other tuned Boomwhackers tubes and teach him or her to play melodies.  To my point, enjoy a video of some teens in Germany playing the White Stripe’s “Seven Nations Arm” and the Tetris theme on Boomwhackers:

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