Distractions - How To Overcome Them - Part 8

Helping Children to Limit Distractions



As parents we often multitask. We try to help with homework between stirring the sizzling dinner, doing laundry and answering the phone. With all the demands we have on our time, we don´t always seem to have a choice.

According to author David Rock "Every time you focus your attention, you use a measurable amount of glucose and other metabolic resources." So as we try to keep many plates spinning at one time, we becoming less efficient and effective in the tasks we perform. The same occurs with our children. It is difficult to concentrate on math problems when the TV is on in the next room, the cell phone is ringing and friends are sending instant messages on the computer. These distractions not only take up time, but also energy that is needed to focus on the more important task.

Glenn Braunstein, Chairman of the Department of Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, claims that we can only truly concentrate on one thing at a time. Our amazing brains allow us to toggle back and forth between tasks within milliseconds, but in the end, we are functioning inefficiently.

Try these distraction busting ideas with your children during homework time and see what works best.

Make a Daily Plan

Before beginning to work, ask your child to tell you all the homework he has to do that day. Make a list of the tasks and invite him to schedule a time to do each one. When there is a plan, he won´t be distracted by wondering what he should be working on or whether he remembers all of the assignments.

Do the Hardest Tasks First

Ask your child to look at the list and decide which tasks involve the most thought. When she schedules the tasks, remind her to put those tasks when she is the freshest. Saving them for last will only prolong the agony because she will be anticipating the chore and will be more prone to distraction making the activity take longer.

Divide Big Jobs into Smaller Chunks

Projects, long reading assignments and large numbers of math problems can cause children to be overwhelmed and tired. These seemingly never ending homework assignments lead children to be easily distracted. Anything to avoid the daunting task!!! By dividing the job into smaller pieces, the feeling of accomplishment serves as a motivator to continue and eliminates (or at least lessens) the heavy weight of the infinite task.

Allocate Time for Breaks

Including time for a healthy snack will keep the energy flow more consistent. Also, allocating a ten minute period to chat with siblings or friends, allows the child to focus on the work knowing that the chance to socialize is a part of the plan. A scheduled break from deep concentration allows your child to return to homework fresher and allows him to focus on the task at hand not guessing what his friends may be texting him.

Include Time to Reward Oneself

On most days, kids have spent most of the day in school and then need to come home to continue studying. Homework is not always fascinating, so children find themselves daydreaming about their favorite video games, television show or hobby. After completing a difficult task or a long portion of time studying, allow your child to be rewarded with 20-30 minutes to use as they please. This will refresh their minds, keep them balanced and give them a new energy to continue on.

Each child has different needs. Experiment with these suggestions to discover which ones streamline the homework process. Good luck!

Sherrie Hardy, M.A., MIMC, author of Beyond Labels-Helping Your Child Succeed In School, founder of Hardy Brain Training, Hardy Learning Center and Hardy Academy programs

If you would like to learn how to help your child succeed in school, please click here.

Distractions - How To Overcome Them - Part 7

Time Management and Distractions

After working intensely for hours on an arduous task, do you feel prone to respond to the first thing that grasps for your attention, no matter how unimportant?

Some tasks are long, painstaking and tedious.  So much so that you welcome any degree of distractions that come your way. Also, just as any voluntary muscle, the human brain gets exhausted by concentrated application especially when the task is dull and uninteresting. A break eases this fatigue. The human brain works best with a break after 90 minutes of work with its peak focus for about 45 minutes. I recommended that you do three 90-minute units of work in 8 hours for best productivity.

What happens if you do go beyond the recommended 90 minute time chunk? Two things happen. First, your productivity diminishes quite sharply. Second, you are an easy target for any distraction that comes your way no matter how miniscule it may be.

Let us say that you are laboring on a job expected to take about 4 hours to complete. After you work intensely on it for 90 minutes, your focus will fade so much so that you will become susceptible to interruptions. At this stage, you may end up with something that you don't really want to do and you wouldn't allow yourself to be distracted by under better circumstances. However, because you are fatigued of the chore at hand, you may end up with such a distraction.

What is the alternative? The choice is to intentionally sidetrack yourself.  Here is how it works:

1. Make a list of short tasks (10-15 minutes). This is the "deliberate distractions" list.

2. Set a timer for 75 minutes

3. After the timer’s alarm goes off, bring the main job to a reasonable pause, i.e. a safe state to be interrupted. Make a note of all the things that would permit you to resume the task easily.

4. Take a 20 minute break

5. Complete one of the tasks on your list of deliberate distractions.

6. Restart the 75 minute timer and resume the main task.

This is a very powerful tool to control brain fatigue.  Try these steps to eliminate the distractions from your everyday work activities.

**Just a side note... Many of us are parents, so I don’t want to just cover distractions in dealing with adults. Many of our children have issues with distractions also.  So, Join me Sunday for an extra segment on helping children to limit distractions too.

Until then... stay focused.