ADHD & Fitness

I recently came across this article on Exercise & ADHD.  As a former teacher I have very strong opinions on this.  I have taught in various settings: special education, intermediate general education, Pre-Kindergarten, and have spent time in Kindergarten through fifth grade as a literacy coach.  I am by no means an expert and I understand that there are a variety of studies out there.  I also know that some children do need medication.

As a parent, I believe in medication as a last resort after all other options have been tried.  As a teacher, I have had success with exercise in the classroom for those children that are not medicated and with those children who are not diagnosed, but struggle with concentration.  I am also a strong believer that we all have trouble concentrating when we don’t move and expend energy.  Have you ever tried to sit still for 90-minutes of reading?

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Here are some ideas to help with your child with concentration both at school and at home: 

1. Before school- Just fifteen minutes of movement before school can help set up your child up for a successful day at school.  Yes, this will require getting up earlier and making sure you are prepared in the morning.  Jumping jacks, squats, windmills, and inchworms are all things your children can do at home.  You could also put on some music and have them dance.  If it is warm outside, head to the bus stop 15-20 minutes early and jog, walk, or do an obstacle course.

2. Brain breaks- Break breaks are for both parents and teachers.  If you are a parent, brain breaks are a great way to help with that lack of concentration during homework time and teachers can use them in the classroom throughout the day.  When I taught I had a jar of popsicle sticks with different exercises written on each stick.  Throughout the day we would draw a few popsicle sticks and complete the exercise or movement on the stick.  This would last anywhere from two to four minutes.  Some school administrators would say if you do this five times per day, that is a loss of 20 instructional minutes.  I feel that I gained more instructional time because my students were focused for the majority of the day because of these.

3. Incorporating movement in instruction- Whether it is at home or in school, make your child move as they learn.  Let them stand while doing homework or bounce on an exercise ball.  For teachers, step out of the box and post your questions or math problems around the room having students move after answering each question or problem.  Let students stand up, take a step forward, or do three jumping jacks when they have a correct answer.  I know this may seem like it is creating a chaotic classroom, but for me, it was less chaotic than having several students off task and not concentrating.

4. After school activity- I know many parents have their children do homework as soon as they get home and walk in the door.  Do you get home from work at night and immediately log back on and work?  Just like adults, kids need time to decompress.  Use the same approach as you do in the morning and let them burn some energy before tackling their homework.  Screen time is not burning off energy and will not help with concentration.  Make sure they are moving and increasing their heart rate during the time.

5. Nutrition, Nutrition, Nutrition- Nutrition seems so simple, but can be so difficult.  Is what you are feeding your child playing a role in his/ her ability to concentrate?  When we think of nutrition and concentration, we automatically think of sugar.  Sugar does play a big role.  However, the lack of nutrients found in fruits and vegetables can also play a role in a child’s (and any human, really) ability or inability to concentration.

 What has worked for you to decrease a child’s hyperactivity?
What are some success you have had to increase a child’s focus?

8 Great Tips for a Healthy School Lunch

Back to school we go (or have already gone)!!!  What an exciting time it can be for both kids and parents, but the busy schedules can also put a damper on our healthy eating.  After spending 7 years in the schools, I have developed a huge passion for advocating for healthy school lunches for our children.  The lunches the schools are feeding are not healthy, and what I am seeing most of the parents pack for their children are not much better.

We eat to fuel our body…. right?  Well, we should.  Cheetos, fruit snacks, fruit juice, lunchables, cups of fruit in fruit syrup, and veggie chips are not fuel for our bodies.  The lunch we are feeding our children is what is going to get them through the rest of the day: help them concentrate, perform their best, maybe run around at recess, stay awake and sometimes even get them through their after-school activities.

Here are some tips to help you better fuel your munchkin:

1.  Balance & Plan: When packing a school lunch, make it balanced and be sure to include a a fruit, a vegetable and a protein (protein doesn’t have to be meat).  Also, take time Sunday night (or when you do your grocery shopping) to decide what you will pack your munchkin each day, this will allow you to balance the intake of his/her food.  After all, we need to let our munchkins live a little and learn what it means to eat balanced too.

Whats For Lunch

(Check out a free version of this menu planner here)

2. Pack Fresh: Fresh fruits & vegetables are always best!  If your munchkin prefers for their fruits to be cut up, rub a little lemon juice on items that might brown.  Fresh veggies with hummus or balsamic dressing for dipping is a great option.

3. Water or White Milk:  Water or milk is always best.  In our house, the rule is: milk for breakfast, lunch & dinner and water all other times of day (I have a two year old).  The older the children are, the less milk they need each day.  When deciding whether to pack water or milk for lunch, also remember Tip #1 and look at what other dairy products you may have packed.

4.  Allow a small treat:  We are all about teaching our munchkins to eat balanced, so allow them a very small treat.  Treats do not have to be candy or complete junk.  How about making a healthy version of a mini muffin?  Pumpkin, bananas, oatmeal, flax, cinnamon, etc.- all flavorful, healthy options for treats.  You could even freeze half of a banana and dip part of it in dark chocolate.  Or how about just 2 strawberries dipped in dark chocolate or blueberries dipped in yogurt and frozen?  When using dark chocolate remember the rule: 70% of cocoa or greater.

Frozen Bananas via yumsugar.com

(photo via YumSugar)

5. Think outside of the sandwich– Often times we think of just sandwiches for school lunches because they can’t be heated up, right?  NO!  Most kiddos don’t mind eating cold food.  Be creative with shredded chicken or turkey- put them in a pinwheel or a wrap.  What about using cucumbers as the top and the bottom and filling the inside with cheese or hummus?  How about a lunch meat roll-up (just make sure you are buying organic, hormone free lunch meat)?  Every kid loves pizza, how about sending some of our grilled pizzas cold?

6. Be creative: Use cookie cutters, fun toothpicks and lots of color when packing your munchkins lunch.  Make it so they have something to look forward to when they open their lunchbox.  How about sticking some fruit or veggies in their water to make it more flavorful?  Or putting food on a kabob?

Fruit Kabob via recipe.com

(Photo via Recipe.com)

7. Experiment at home: School lunch time is not the place to try and give your munchkin a whole new meal.  We want our children to use this lunch as fuel to get through their day and to perform well at school.  Pack items you know they will eat.  Mixing in a new fruit with a fruit salad or combining a new veggie with already liked veggies are fine, but this isn’t the time to try  a bunch of new items at once.

8. Involve your munchkins: Talk to your child about what they’d like to have for lunch and the importance of eating healthy. Ask them what they see in other lunches.  If they talk about unhealthy items, brainstorm ways you could make a healthy version together.  This is a great time to educate your munchkin on healthy eating.

Need some ideas for lunches?  Here are a couple of my favorites:

100 Days of Real Food: The ideas are endless! Head over to her “search box” and you will find multiple school lunch roundups.  

One Fit Widow: The best place to find ideas is her Instagram account.  She often posts pictures of what she packed for lunch for her kids AND she has super-convenient lunch boxes for them.  

How do you ensure your munchkin has a healthy lunch at school?  I’d love to know- leave me a comment!