Bringing Back the Family Dinner
Bringing Back the Family Dinner
(ARA) -
While the kids enjoy summer fun, parents know that back-to-school
season is just around the corner. With it will come the annual rush
to get tots, tweens and teenagers ready to buckle down and hit the
books for another year. However, amid the madness of daily routines
lies a golden opportunity to rekindle one of America's most
enduring and important traditions: the family dinner.
Gathering at the dinner table can benefit more than kids' stomachs.
A 2006 study by The National Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse at Columbia University found that children who eat dinner
with their families five or more times a week are more likely,
across the board, to have higher grades in school. The trend
transcends differences in gender, family structure and
socioeconomic level*.
What makes family dinners so important to success, in school and
elsewhere? "The communication that occurs during family dinners is
critical in building a relationship with your children and to
understanding the world in which they live," says Joseph A.
Califano Jr., chairman and president of The National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University and a former
U.S. Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. "Making the
commitment to have dinner as a family on a regular basis can
influence your kids' lives more than anything else you do."
The benefits of eating dinner as a family are clear -- but what
about making time for a family meal among sports and school
schedules, after-school plays and your own busy job? One company --
KFC -- is setting the table for success with
www.BringBackDinner.com, a comprehensive online resource designed
by moms, for moms, to help families connect more around the dinner
table. The site features fun and accessible advice on a variety of
dinner-related issues, from mealtime manners and etiquette to tips
on budgeting at the grocery store.
Julienne Smith, founder and author of "Food For Talk" and a member
of KFC's Moms Matter! Advisory Board, is a contributor to the site.
"I'm a mom myself, and I know from experience that families are
starved for quality time," Smith says. "Meals are a great -- and
often overlooked -- occasion for the entire family to decompress
and connect on a more intimate level. BringBackDinner.com literally
puts it all out there, with great tips that can take the work out
of the family dinner and a fun online community that will keep moms
coming back for more."
Smith's "Food For Talk" is an actual recipe box of conversation
starters specifically designed to promote family bonding and
togetherness, based on this "professional mom's" experiences with
her own children. A few examples include:
* Would you rather have a lot of acquaintances or one close friend?
Why?
* Share one thing you are most grateful for today.
* If you could eat dinner as a family anywhere you wanted, where
would it be and why?
For more information on "Food For Talk," The National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University and more tips
on successful family dinners, visit www.BringBackDinner.com.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
