What This Means for Professionals
First, it is important to remember that extracurricular activities per se are not the problem. Children who participate in such activities reap valuable rewards. Involvement in sports, for example, has been shown to be related to elevated self-confidence, higher levels of academic performance, more involvement with school, fewer behavior problems, less likelihood of taking drugs, and decreased probability of engaging in risky behavior (Elkind, 2003). Even though the provision of out-of-home organized activities is potentially advantageous to their children, parents need to avoid the "more is better" trap or the "my child is busier than your child" syndrome.
Guidelines for Choosing Children's Out-of-Home Activities
Hamner and Turner (2001) provided several excellent guidelines for assisting parents in choosing out-of-home activities for their school-age children. They suggested that parents select activities for their children judiciously, being careful not to over commit children's time. They also recommended that parents help their children select activities in which they can be successful by (a) examining alternatives carefully, and (b) considering the time commitment and competitive aspects of these activities. In addition to parental involvement in the selection of activities for their children, Hamner and Turner recommended that parents provide encouragement and guidance as children choose their own activities.
The Parent's Role in Children's Informal Leisure Activities
Besides supporting their children's involvement in organized out-of-home group activities, it is important that parents encourage home-based leisurely group activities that encourage their children's friendships, such as skating parties and hiking trips. When promoting informal leisure activities for their children and their children's friends, parents need to carefully monitor and supervise these activities because higher rates of problem behaviors such as delinquency and the use of drugs and alcohol are associated with the lack of parental monitoring of their children's leisure activities (Kilgore, Snyder, & Lentz, 2000). Furthermore, it is important to keep in mind that low socioeconomic children might require more parental monitoring because they are less likely to be involved in adult-supervised organized activities. For example, Zeijl, Poel, and Bois-Reymond (2001) found that children of high socioeconomic status received considerably more opportunities for organized, adult-supervised activities in comparison to children from lower socioeconomic families. Socioeconomic differences in children's involvement in adult-supervised activities also were reported by Lareau (2002), who found that middle-class parents arrange out-of-school activities to cultivate their children's talents and working-class and poor parents leave the arrangement of leisure activities to the children themselves.
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