Sentences with phrase «tvs out of children»

To encourage physical activity, keep TVs out of children's bedrooms.

Not exact matches

Parents, stop trotting children out in front of reporters and TV cameras at protests and rallies
Relying on intelligence dossiers prepared meticulously by his UDR commanders, he prepared intensively, making several dry runs by following the bread delivery van in which Hackett would ultimately die; he blocked out the reality that the target might be a family man with a pregnant wife and child awaiting his return home from work; he avoided reading the papers or listening to TV reports over the next days, because the stories tend to make a real human being out of what had to be thought of only as «the target.»
I certainly hope so because the TV offerings are completely out of balance... and the children are being educated while no one is paying attention.
What I have come to realize is that it is the discussion around these questions, the including of your kids in the decision making process and the «whys» of why you choose certain toys / games / clothing / tv shows / music / friends that makes for children capable of decoding what they want out of the world.
Turn off the TV and digital devices at least 1 hour before bedtime, and keep them out of your child's bedroom.
On network TV morning shows last month, he said he hasn't radically changed his «cry it out» advice, but a revised edition of his book due out in several months does explore additional techniques for helping children sleep through the night.
And keep TVs, computers, and other screens out of your child's bedroom.
Going to bed on time will make a child feel rested and ready to learn the next day while fighting bedtime and staying up too late texting friends or watching TV will result in a child feeling groggy, cranky, and generally out of sorts the next day.
We don't have cable and that is one of the biggest things I think people can do, is keeping their children away from the crappy misogynistic TV out there.
• It seems likely that, to deliver the greatest benefits to children and their non-resident fathers, the time they spend together needs to mimic as nearly as possible the diverse family experiences of resident fathers and their children: sharing bedtimes, mealtimes, watching TV, doing homework, trips out, «hanging» in, visiting friends and family (for discussion, see Lamb 2002).
With a TV show airing in more than 120 countries, 27 video / DVD releases, 12 sold - out shows at Madison Square Garden and their own amusement park (Wiggles World at Dreamworld in Australia), The Wiggles are everywhere - and have been loved by millions of children for the last 20 years.
Another study, by Parentchannel TV and Parenting UK, found that nearly 20 % of dads feel left out of their child's upbringing.
Many parents limit screen time by keeping TVs and computers in a central place — out of the child's bedroom — but there are other ways you can manage your first grader's screen appetite:
«There has been a lot of ugliness and bullying to come out of this election and I think children pick up on that from TV or their parents,» Norrell said.
Before high school, a child is not likely to fully appreciate that if she plays on a select team she may often be practicing or going to bed early, worn out after a hard day of exercise, while her classmates are watching TV or socializing, or she may be getting up early, while others are giving their growing bodies the rest they so desperately need.
Encourage your child to follow a relaxing bedtime routine, and keep TVs and all digital devices out of your teen's bedroom.
Keep TVs and digital devices out of your child's bedroom.
Keep TVs and all digital devices out of your child's bedroom.
At a Labour Party news conference Ed Balls and Peter Mandelson were asked about why the company which licenses children's TV character Peppa Pig pulled her out of a Labour Party election event.
How is it, then, that the best science show on TV turns out to be a low - budget and in many ways deeply stupid offering about two Roto - Rooter plumbers who spend their weekends shuffling around old buildings in the dark, interpreting every distant thump as a «footstep» and every draft - powered swish of a curtain as a lonely dead child whispering «Chrisss»?
James (co-writer and «Saturday Night Live» cast member Kyle Mooney) is the sole audience for a children's TV show he discovers isn't real, so when it abruptly ends, he sets out to finish the story himself and must learn to cope with the realities of a new world that he knows nothing about.
Having out - witted the powers that be in the first Hunger Games — a TV spectacle in which children compete to the death for the entertainment of the privileged few — and survived with her ostensible romantic partner Peeta (Josh Hutcherson), deepens her rebellion here.
Eight Hours Don't Make a Day — If I didn't have to be out of town this weekend, spending quality time with my children, I would be at the Film Center on Saturday watching this marathon screening of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's TV series, «a decades - spanning social history of postwar Germany as told through the life of a young toolmaker and his sprawling group of friends, coworkers, and family.»
Rounding out the cast are Taejoo Na («The Kick») as Kwahu; Nonso Anozie («Son of God,» «Atonement») as Bishop; Kathy Burke («Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy») as Mother Barnabas; Kurt Egyiawan («Skyfall») as Murray; Lewis MacDougall (UK TV's «In the Name of the Children») as Nibs; newcomer Leni Zieglmeier as Wendy Darling; Jack Charles («Mystery Road») as The Chief / Tiger Lily's father; and Amanda Seyfried («Les Misérables») as Mary.
Looking for suitable candidates to play the crucial lead role of 11 - year - old Agu in Beasts of No Nation, his gruelling drama about child soldiers in west Africa, True Detective director Cary Fukunaga initially put out on open casting appeal across local TV and radio in Ghana.
If you haven't heard of Coalition for Every Child, that's because it appeared out of nowhere last December for a pro-charter rally on New Haven Green and then immediately announced a multi-million dollar TV ad campaign to highlight «an education inequality crisis barring 40,000 Connecticut children from good schools.»
While the TV ad urges the public to call state legislators in support of the CEA's bill to phase out the SBAC test, the ad unfortunately fails to support the opt - out movement or even mention that Connecticut parents have a fundamental right to refuse to have their children take the unfair and discriminatory Common Core Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) test.
Well, because to admit to their high - flying friends that their children had not only died among the poor, but had been sent out on an errand that smacked of poverty — repairing an old TV that should have, by now, been replaced by one of those self - financing foreign brands — would have, in those tragic weeks that followed the bombing, undone the tightly laced nerves that held them together.
The two boys were the sum total of the Khuranas» children, eleven and thirteen, eager to be sent out on errands; and on this particular day they had gone with a friend in an auto - rickshaw to pick up the Khuranas» old Onida color TV, consigned to the electrician for perhaps the tenth time.
Bedroom / Bathroom Description Bedroom 1 - Master King size bed, En - suite bathroom with indoor and alfresco shower, Air conditioning, Sofa, iPod dock, 2 Patios with chairs and tables Bedroom 2 King size bed, En - suite bathroom, Air conditioning, TV, Patio Bedroom 3 Queen size bed, Access to adjacent bathroom, Air conditioning, TV, Balcony Bedroom 4 Queen size bed, En - suite bathroom with alfresco shower, Air conditioning, Balcony, Patio, Located on a separate pavilion Bedroom 5 — Children's Room Bunk bed, Air conditioning, TV, XBConnect Additional Bedding Extra beds available upon request; additional fees may apply * 11th + 12th guests MUST be children under 12 years old - please add $ 60 per child per night, for use of the sofabed in the east king bedroom, and / or the twin trundle bed in the children's room, and / or the daybed in queen bedroom, and / or for use of the twin pull - out in the second king Children's Room Bunk bed, Air conditioning, TV, XBConnect Additional Bedding Extra beds available upon request; additional fees may apply * 11th + 12th guests MUST be children under 12 years old - please add $ 60 per child per night, for use of the sofabed in the east king bedroom, and / or the twin trundle bed in the children's room, and / or the daybed in queen bedroom, and / or for use of the twin pull - out in the second king children under 12 years old - please add $ 60 per child per night, for use of the sofabed in the east king bedroom, and / or the twin trundle bed in the children's room, and / or the daybed in queen bedroom, and / or for use of the twin pull - out in the second king children's room, and / or the daybed in queen bedroom, and / or for use of the twin pull - out in the second king bedroom.
BEDROOMS MASTER SUITE: - Housed in its own pavilion separated from the living and dining area - King - sized bedroom with vaulted ceiling, dark teak floors, glass doors leading out onto a private deck with garden and ocean views - TV lounge with comfortable sofas, large flat - screen TV with DVD player - Small reading room which «floats» above the fish pond with glimpses of the pool - Huge dressing room - Semi-open ensuite bathroom with large rectangular terrazzo bathtub, his - and - hers vanities, and walk - in rain shower - Private garden - Air - conditioned GUEST BEDROOMS 1 & 2: - Both guestrooms are housed in a separate pavilion adjacent to the dining area — designed for children but flexibly accommodate adults - One room has a queen - sized bed with large flat - screen TV and DVD player, while the other one has twin beds and a small outdoor balcony - A corridor with built - in - robes connects the two bedrooms while also giving access to the shared bathroom - Shared bathroom features grey slate walls and flooring, indoor terrazzo bathtub and walk - in shower, additional outdoor shower with water feature - Large shared wooden deck - Air - conditioned GUEST SUITES 1 & 2: - Two - bedroom guesthouse located 50m from the main house for privacy - Queen - sized beds complimented by light and airy cream walls and teak floors - Garden bathrooms with indoor shower and glass sliding doors leading onto a wooden deck - Adjoining living area for the two rooms - Self - contained kitchen with breakfast bar and stools
This is one of the largest kitchens on the island and opens out onto a timber deck area - Entertainment pavilion on lower level with ocean views featuring, an alang - alang thatched roof and Palimanan stone floor with billiard table, TV, DVD and stereo system, sofa polished concrete bar stools and washroom OUTDOOR LIVING: - 25m infinity swimming pool with spectacular ocean views and features shallow end for children - Poolside deck with sun loungers and daybeds - Large stone terrace featuring stone table seating 14 guests - Stunning landscaped gardens designed by one of Bali's premier landscape architects featuring manicured lawns, running water features, exotic trees and flowering plants.
We'd look at things like children's animation, children's TV shows like Adventure Time - I know a lot of adults who watch Adventure Time and get a lot of entertainment out of it.
This overwhelmingly «christian» congress represents an overwhelming «christian» nation has that: performs a million abortions a year, has out 40 % of births out of wedlock (approaching 70 percent in minority communities), has a Supreme Court that has ruled that virtual child pornography is protected by the first amendment, has a culture that teaches ever younger girls (through movies, music, tv, books and magazines) that their primary function is as living sex toys for men, forces religions to provide insurance to include abortifacients against their faith, and is rapidly redefining marriage by judicial edict.
There are some great children's apps, games, and movies out there, but the quantity of digital media available to kids these days through the TV, computer, tablet, and smartphone is staggering, so how can we wade through all of it and find the content that is fitting for our kids» ages, and our own family values, and that offers constructive learning experiences?
While that benefits a design like hOMe (hey, it's an easy poster child for this argument... I'm not creating straw men here) which puts bathroom and kitchen under lofts with a height of 6» 4», it leaves folks like Jake and Kiva of Tiny Nest Project out in the cold, as they've chosen to locate a cozy den / tv room under the loft in lieu of a kitchen / bathroom.
Back in the more innocent age of 1999, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) put out a policy that recommended no TV for children younger than two.
Watch this brief, three - minute video segment, aired on Global TV, September 22, 2014, featuring Registered Provisional Psychologist Diane Gibson to find out some ways that you can help your children and step - children to better cope with the changes that come with dividing time between two homes as a result of divorce.
Plopping your child in front of the tv all day, but then expecting them to behave well when you go out for dinner is absurd.
The locally produced series, which is airing weekly on national Pakistani TV in Urdu and in four additional languages for regional broadcasts, is touching the lives of the millions of children for whom early education was previously out of reach.
The parenting behaviors are assigned to nine subscales (with item examples in brackets): positive parental behavior («I make time to listen to my child, when he / she wants to tell me something»), autonomy («I teach my child that he / she is responsible for his / her own behavior»), rules («I teach my child to obey rules»), monitoring («I keep track of the friends my child is seeing»), discipline («When my child has done something wrong, I punish him / her by taking away something nice [for instance, the child can't watch TV,...]»), harsh punishment («I slap my child when he / she has done something wrong»), ignoring unwanted behavior («When my child does something that is not allowed, I only talk to him / her again when he / she behaves better»), inconsistent discipline («When I have punished my child, it happens that I let my child out of the punishment early»), and material rewarding («I give my child money or a small present when he / she has done something that I am happy about»).
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