Barbara
Linder on TV-Turnoff Week
April 15, 2005
|
My name is
Barbara Linder. I am the Community Connections Coordinator,
Urbana Middle School.
Students
at Urbana Middle School are being encouraged to turn off
their televisions for one week at the end of April. They're
also learning how to be wiser about what they watch, with
help from teachers, administrators and the College of
Communications at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign.
The middle
school's "TV-Turnoff Week" is set for April 25 to May 1, in
conjunction with National TV-Turnoff Week (www.tvturnoff.org/week.htm),
held annually since 1995. Television can cut into family
time, harm children's ability to read and succeed in school,
and contribute to unhealthy lifestyles and obesity,
according to the Web site for the TV-Turnoff Network, which
organizes the national event.
The week
will begin April 25, from 6 to 8 p.m., with a "Family Fun
Night" of games and activities in the Urbana Middle School
gym, 1201 S. Vine St., Urbana. Included among the
activities, organized with help from the Urbana Park
District, will be a parent-child two-on-two basketball
tournament and a kite-making clinic. Students and families
from other schools also are welcome to attend.
In
addition to turning the TV off and getting outside, families
are being strongly encouraged to re-consider the value of
placing a television in their child's bedroom. According to
a Kaiser Family Foundation report, two-thirds of children in
America now have a TV in their bedrooms. Why is this a bad
idea? In the first place, kids with TVs in their bedrooms
watch 90 minutes more a day than children without a TV in
their room. According to the facts, the more kids watch TV,
the more likely they are to be overweight. In addition,
recent research shows that those children get worse grades
in school, engage in fewer activities that don't involve
electronic media, have less family interaction and read
fewer books.
Having a
TV in their bedroom is also linked to children having sleep
problems. The TV is a stranger in your child's bedroom,
influencing, guiding, directing and causing the Great Family
Disconnect. There is no good reason not to get it our of
there now!
For more
information about Family Fun Night or about TV Turn-Off Week
contact Barbara Linder, 337-0853, blinder@usd116.org.