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Related Physical Development Issues to Child Behavior (page 4)

By M.V. Fields|D.M. Fields
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall
Updated on Jul 20, 2010

Needs for Food and Rest

Young children also have a need for nutritious food and rest in order to work and play cooperatively at school. Many children today are “misnourished,” with a large amount of their calories coming from non-nutritive foods (Bhattacharya & Currie, 2001). Eating too many non-nutritive foods contributes to our ever-growing rate of childhood obesity, and also affects children’s behavior (Steinbeck, 2001). Too much sugar or a lack of protein or complex carbohydrates can lead to a sugar crash. This crash may affect individual children differently. You may know a child who falls apart completely if he or she has too much sugar or gets too hungry. Some may become impulsive, more likely in boys, while others may become withdrawn or distracted. Girls more often have the latter reaction (Gurian, 2001).

Sometimes Kelsey cannot seem to focus on any of the morning classroom activities, and Dennis, her teacher, figures that she didn’t eat much breakfast that day. When this happens, he allows her to have her mid-morning snack a little early. Dennis is taking into consideration Kelsey’s individual needs as well as the group’s needs. The standard practice of snack time acknowledges the fact that children in general can’t eat much at one time and can’t go as long between meals as older people can.

Scheduled rest time at the preschool level acknowledges a need at that age, but formal rest periods tend to disappear once children enter kindergarten or first grade.

Yaisa attends the before- and after-school child-care program at Lincoln Elementary. She gets to school at 7:30 in the morning and doesn’t go home until 5:30 in the evening. Sometimes she gets crabby and picks a fight or bursts into tears for no apparent reason. Fortunately, her teacher understands that when Yaisa acts that way, she needs a break, not a punishment for being difficult. Mrs. Jensen sees Yaisa’s need and encourages her to find a comfortable pillow and a good book in the secluded classroom book nook. After a short rest, Yaisa is able to participate with the group again.

Mrs. Jensen is trying to teach Yaisa and others with similar needs how to take a break when they need it, rather than push themselves beyond their limits. Her classroom offers several soft, secluded spots, and her schedule offers the flexibility to use them.

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