How healthy life habits benefit academic performance
Adopting a healthy lifestyle has many physical and academic benefits. Read on to find out how the simplest habits can help your child succeed.
Adopting a healthy lifestyle has many physical and academic benefits. Read on to find out how the simplest habits can help your child succeed.
Eating a balanced diet is good for your health and your memory. A well-nourished brain is a high-performing brain! To help your child get all the vitamins, minerals, and nutrients they need to reach their full potential, encourage them to do the following:
Feeling hungry or thirsty makes it harder to concentrate. There are a number of tips you can suggest to help your child avoid getting distracted by hunger or thirst:
Physical activity also has a significant impact on kids’ ability to concentrate. The more they move, the better they do in school. That’s why it’s recommended that children get at least 60 minutes of daily exercise.
Although nutrition plays an important role in determining our moods, the consequences of a lack of sleep should not be overlooked. Restless nights and too little sleep can make children irritable, impatient, unfocused, and agitated. That’s why it’s important for your child to get a good night’s sleep. Here are a few ways you can help:
Kids who maintain a healthy lifestyle and look after their mental and physical well-being tend to do better in school. Success, in turn, increases self-esteem, one of the keys to getting ahead in life and in school. Try encouraging your child to find activities that help them relieve stress. Here are a few examples:
It may not be the first thing to come to mind, but staying organized is also a healthy habit. Falling behind and forgetting details often leads to poor results (not to mention stress). Here a some strategies you can use to help your child keep on top of their work:
It takes an average of 66 days to develop a new habit. But, as the saying goes, better late than never!
Writing : Viviane Asselin
Scientific review : Alice La Rocque-Carrier, stagiaire en nutrition, Université McGill.
Supervisée par Nathalie Regimbal, Dt.P. Diététiste-Nutritionniste
Rewriting : The Alloprof Parents' team