Saturday, December 1, 2007

Regular family dinners offer more than food

What if there were something very simple, something that would not require an enrollment form, a new uniform, time in the car, or a registration fee, that you could start doing today to insure the success of your child? Interested? The answer is dinner with the family. In recent years, the benefits of having dinner together as a family have been so thoroughly documented that the statistics can be, well, bloating. Allow me to present a few a la carte: Teens who ate five or six meals a week with their families had slightly less than a 1 in 4 chance of smoking cigarettes, using marijuana, drinking alcohol, growing depressed or attempting suicide. Children who ate with their families were not only less likely to end up in trouble, they also were more likely to have higher academic scores, confide in their parents and feel that their parents are proud of them. Apparently, the only things dinner with the family can't do for kids is give them good posture, straight teeth and keep them from using the annoying phrase "like totally." Still, even with such persuasive evidence, the Wall Street Journal reports that less than one-third of all children sit down to eat dinner with both parents on any given night. Numbers worsen if both parents are working and the family is Caucasian…

From author Lori Borgman at Jewish World Review (dated March 3, 2006)
Posted to Current World News & Trends March 7, 2006 (MO)

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