Smooth Transitions: Training Kids for Back-to-School Rhythms
August 29, 2023 / Dr. Nathaniel R. Strenger, PsyD
- Forecasting Works Wonders: Sudden shifts in rhythm are tougher on a kid’s nervous system than gradual ones. If you’ve ever thought to compare the experience of listening to, say, a Steven Reich composition rather than one by John Adams (you are forgiven if you haven’t) you know the feeling. One shifts its rhythms so gradually you barely notice. The other might give you a heart attack. When preparing for the school year, think more gradual. You might slowly start introducing small adjustments to the schedule a couple of weeks before the first day of school. Perhaps bedtime gets slightly earlier by small increments. Maybe you introduce small reading assignments to get the wheels turning. Or maybe you simply start talking about school more around your child. All of this serves to forecast the upcoming change, readying your child’s nervous system to make the rhythmic adjustment. And remember, like some weird piece of Reichian music, make your adjustments small and gradual.
- Speaking of Music: Use it! Life is better with a soundtrack. And carefully chosen background music can facilitate smoother transitions from activity to activity. You might choose a certain genre of music for homework time and another for play time.
- Smells Too! Even smells effectively signal transitions. Say you burn a certain candle or set a certain diffuser in the house fifteen minutes before homework time. With that kind of a routine, a kid’s olfactory bulb starts to associate the smell with a more focused and regulated state of mind.
- Leverage State-Dependent Memory: Routines, even learned facts, can be better encoded, and retrieved when there is consistency across internal and external cues. That is, a kid will better retrieve information if he’s in a sensory context similar to that in which he first learned and practiced. The well-documented phenomenon is called state-dependent learning. But before you go adding a scaled replica of your child’s classroom to your home, think about little ways you can mimic the school environment during homework time. You might maintain consistency in supplies, lighting, or even tabletops when your child is completing homework or studying for that big test. And while you do so, they are not only improving their recall of facts, but they are also improving the consistent rhythm of their practicing and performing body states.
- Schedule ‘Up’ and ‘Down’ Times: Some households make an hour-by-hour after-school schedule that includes visual cues marking “Up” times and “Down” times. Those up times are meant for play and roughhousing. But then those scheduled down times prompt your child to transition to focused quiet time. Make it a rhythm!
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