Pure
Fiel a Verdad
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- Dec 20, 2001
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Vote on the perennial question of life!
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/mar/17/babies-fed-demand-better-school
[excerpt]
Babies fed on demand 'do better at school'
Lucy Rock
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 17 March 2012 21.15 GMT
Babies fed on demand ‘do better at school’
Babies who are fed when they are hungry are claimed to do better academically – but exhaust their mothers more. Photograph: Katie Collins/PA
It is a debate that has raged for years, pitting mothers who follow Gina Ford and her routine-based approach to child-rearing against those who prefer the more laidback ways of Penelope Leach. Now the battle is set to intensify as new research suggests that babies who are fed on demand do better academically than those who are fed on schedule – although their mothers are more exhausted and grumpy.
The study shows that babies who are fed when they are hungry – with breast milk or formula – achieve higher scores in Sats tests at ages five, seven, 11 and 14, and that by the age of eight they have an IQ four to five points higher.
However, mothers who keep to scheduled feeding times score better on wellbeing measures, and report feeling more confident and less tearful.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/mar/17/babies-fed-demand-better-school
[excerpt]
Babies fed on demand 'do better at school'
Lucy Rock
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 17 March 2012 21.15 GMT
Babies fed on demand ‘do better at school’
Babies who are fed when they are hungry are claimed to do better academically – but exhaust their mothers more. Photograph: Katie Collins/PA
It is a debate that has raged for years, pitting mothers who follow Gina Ford and her routine-based approach to child-rearing against those who prefer the more laidback ways of Penelope Leach. Now the battle is set to intensify as new research suggests that babies who are fed on demand do better academically than those who are fed on schedule – although their mothers are more exhausted and grumpy.
The study shows that babies who are fed when they are hungry – with breast milk or formula – achieve higher scores in Sats tests at ages five, seven, 11 and 14, and that by the age of eight they have an IQ four to five points higher.
However, mothers who keep to scheduled feeding times score better on wellbeing measures, and report feeling more confident and less tearful.