Why Family Meals Make for Happier Kids

by Divine Caroline on February 9, 2011

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Why Family Meals Make Happier Kids

source: Evil Erin

When I was growing up, dinner was eaten either in a rush before my family headed out the door or in the car on the way home from one of my myriad lessons, rehearsals, classes, and activities.

As a highly scheduled child, I didn’t have a lot of downtime, and since my mom didn’t cook much and my dad was usually working, we didn’t share many family dinners beyond Christmas and Thanksgiving.

Well, add that to the list of ways in which my parents apparently screwed me up big time, because recent research has shown that carving out time for a family dinner is one of the most powerful indicators of healthy, happy, and well-adjusted kids.

The Family That Eats Together …

In the past few years, a host of studies have emerged claiming that eating dinner as a family can provide serious benefits for children.

In 2005, research at Columbia University’s National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) found that the number of children who report having dinner regularly with their families was on the rise—about 58 percent, up from 47 percent in 1998—and that children who experienced family meals were less likely to be tempted by marijuana, alcohol, and other drugs, and less likely to smoke cigarettes.

A 2000 survey at Harvard Medical School revealed that nine to fourteen-year-olds who ate dinner with their families usually consumed greater quantities of healthy fruits and vegetables, and less soda and fast food. They were also more likely to accept new foods their parents offered them and to make healthy food choices on their own.

For girls in particular, eating dinner with parents has been shown to correlate with a reduced risk of crash dieting, having distorted body image, or using aggressive weight-loss methods.

The CASA study also found that kids who shared dinner with their families were 40 percent more likely to get good grades in school. Out of teenagers who dined with their parents and siblings fewer than three times per week, 20 percent got below-average or failing grades, compared with only 9 percent of their peers who ate family dinner regularly.

Researchers at Vanderbilt University even found that dinner-table conversation among families was the best predictor of children’s linguistic and literary development: kids with advanced language abilities came from families who ate dinner together more often and whose conversations were full of questions, jokes, storytelling, and interaction.

Who is More Likely to Eat Together?

These benefits for children, especially adolescents, have been shown to cross racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic lines, but some glaring distinctions exist between families who share meals and those who don’t.

The CASA study found that families with the least educated parents were the most likely to enforce family dinners, along with those with foreign-born children. Along racial lines, Hispanic families were the most likely to eat as a group—more than half had regular family dinners—whereas only about 40 percent of black teenagers and 39 percent of white teenagers reported eating frequently with their families.

Chat ’n’ Chew

It doesn’t matter if you sit down to a roast made from scratch or takeout Thai; the important part of eating together isn’t actually the food. What counts is taking the time to sit, talk, engage with your relatives, and form stronger family bonds.

Many experts think that the idea of family dinner just shows that families who are functional enough to come together and eat are simply more well adjusted in the first place, and thus more likely to have intelligent, well-adjusted kids.

Especially in the adolescent years, parental involvement is another big predictor of healthy children, and eating family meals is strongly correlated with parents who are involved and active in their kids’ lives.

Families that make eating dinner together a priority are also more likely to value reading, education, and enriching experiences. It’s also possible that kids who have dinner with their families have less unsupervised time to get bored and into trouble.

Take Time to Make Time

Of course, many parents would never intentionally reject the opportunity to have dinner with their children, but the problem most busy people encounter is that kids have school and extracurricular obligations and parents may work late, so the priority at the end of the day is simply to get everyone fed as quickly and easily as possible, not to take the time to plan and execute a complicated meal.

Start Small

If you’d like to make it a goal to enjoy more family dinners, begin by aiming for just a couple of group meals per week, and eventually increase the number once you’ve gotten in the habit.

And it doesn’t count if all the members of a family choose their own food and gather in front of the television—everyone should share one meal, staying away from distractions. Parents.com recommends starting by turning off the tube and the computer and silencing all cell phones.

Plan Ahead

The meal doesn’t have to be an elaborate, organic, locally sourced feast, either. If you don’t have enough time in the evening to cook from scratch, don’t be ashamed of taking some cooking shortcuts to get dinner on the table and conversation flowing.

Reduce stress by planning weekly meals ahead of time and doing the prep work on a day when you’re not rushed, and remember that it’s okay to use pasta sauce from a jar, canned vegetables, or other premade and prepackaged food items for the sake of ease and expedience.

If your meal does require a large amount of preparation, it’s okay to put the kids to work, too, using their nimble little fingers to wash, peel, unwrap, stir, and accomplish other simple tasks.

Try it Tonight!

Eating dinner as a family is an irreplaceable experience, and while I didn’t end up a criminal or a high-school dropout, I didn’t really get to know my parents until I was out of the house. Ultimately, not having dinner with my family didn’t ruin me for life, but I do wish that we had spent more evenings discussing our days, laughing, and becoming better friends.

And if deepening your bond with your family isn’t a compelling enough reason for having dinner together, I don’t know what is.

Do you make it a priority to eat dinner as a family?

Better Together: Why Family Meals Make for Happier Kids was provided by DivineCaroline.com.

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  • Maryea @ Happy Healthy Mama

    Yes it is a huge priority for me to have my family eat dinner as a family. I blogged about this same subject not long ago. I didn’t grow up eating a family dinner every night and want my children to have that experience. I was always jealous of my friends whose families ate dinner together every night.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I think that’s great that you took that childhood experience and used it to
      create a good routine/tradition in your family now!

  • http://www.familybalancesheet.org Kristia@Family Balance Sheet

    My husband works late Mon – Thurs, so he isn’t home to join us, but my girls and I sit down and eat dinner together. My kids are 5 and 2, so it is easy. We aren’t running all over the place for their activities yet and are home at dinner time. He is able to join us the other nights and we always sit down as a family at the dining room table.

    I grew up eating dinner at the table with my family and some of my funniest memories took place around that dinner table. It is definitely a tradition I want to continue for as long as we can.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I’ll admit that when my husband isn’t home, I struggle to sit down and eat
      with the girls since it seems like I can get the most done while they’re
      occupied at the table, so I especially like that you still intentionally do
      that on those days. Thanks for sharing, Kristia!

  • Yayamoma7

    Family dinners are important, to bad she lost me with the negativity directed towards her upbringing and parents.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I think she was being a little tongue-in-cheek, but I appreciate you sharing
      your thoughts and how it came across to you.

  • Anonymous

    Dinner is pretty sacred in our house – all throughout the week. There are times that I have a meeting or event, but we still try to make it happen around those as well.

    We have great conversations at the dinner table and sometimes hang around after we’re done eating just to chat. I hear things about their day that they normally wouldn’t share, so I certainly don’t mind letting the dirty kitchen wait for us. It’s a special time around here.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      This sounds really lovely, Gina — thanks for chiming in!

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  • Joyce

    Growing up, my mom picked us up from school, cooked dinner, and was usually off to finish her work out the restaurant our parents owned, but all the kids did eat together with my grandma. And when my parents were off, we always ate together. With my family, dinner together is a non-negotiable. The kids are still young, and I don’t foresee myself letting them choose too many activities that will require them to miss too many dinners when they are high school… We eat dinner together every night. Once a week with my whole family, and twice a week with hubby’s whole family. It is the best time to catch up on our day or our week. I am glad to hear that there are all these extra benefits to dining together.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      Do you find that extracurricular activities or sports make this harder? How
      will you handle that if your kids excel in a sport or other activity that
      meets in the evenings?

  • Missy June

    I’m a single mother of three children … we still eat meals together around the table. Here’s a shock, we’ve even invited Daddy to join us for special days! I grew up with family mealtime, even as life got busier in my teens I knew I HAD to be home for dinner on Monday, no matter what!

    My little ones are still young (age 2, 5 & 6) but already soccer, basketball and cheerleading practices threaten to invade our time together. I fight back by planning ahead, not focusing on the actual food, but the tradition and time together. Conversations at this age can be limited so we often read our devotional or share funny stories. Having a plan helps me make it happen.

    Another benefit is that it is a perfect way to teach manners and involve my children in helping. All three love to help set the table and take their plates to the sink before pushing in their chair – they’re so proud of themselves!

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      This is awesome, Missy — my dad and mom handled their divorce very maturely
      for my benefit, and I think it’s extremely, extremely beneficial for kids.

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  • Anonymous

    I didn’t grow up eating at the family table, so I wanted to make sure my kids did. We did well until they hit mid-teens and I went back to work, then it became much harder. I used to have a specific night we had dinner together as a family each week, but that has somehow gone by the way since the 2 at home are both in college locally. May see what I can do to bring it back. I find that if we go out to eat, we are much more likely to have conversation and hang at the table, whereas at home, everyone scatters.
    I also try to plan for all 4 kids and sig others and grandkids at least once a month or 6 weeks or so to have dinner. We enjoy getting all together and just hanging out and talking. Love seeing the kids become friends as they have gotten older!
    Bernice

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I love that you make it a point to get everybody together outside of the
      holidays. I’d love to have that tradition when my kids are older!

  • http://pettagsdb.com/?main_page=index&cPath=11 Engravable Keychains

    We do sit down as a family and eat dinner. It has always been a struggle for me to get home and cook a healthy meal, usually because I’m beat after a day at the office. Now that my kids are older, they each take one night a week to prepare a meal for the family. It can be PB&J for all I care, I’m just happy for the help. It’s nice when I don’t have to hear “Mom, what’s for dinner” everynight when I walk in the house.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I think this is a great tradition, not just for your sanity but to give them
      practice with the extra responsibility. Filing it away for when my girls are
      old enough…

    • Ali100

      u guey

    • Ali100

      u guey

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  • Rachel

    Great post. I’d point out one additional thing you left out: you have to leave the TV off during meals to see these benefits.

    http://www.adajournal.org/article/S0002-8223(07)00015-6/abstract

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      Thanks for sharing this link, Rachel. I just mentioned in another comment
      that I have fond memories of eating dinner on TV trays while watching TV, so
      I’m not sure I’m 100% convinced, but I am interested to read more.

      Mandi

  • Rachel

    Great post. I’d point out one additional thing you left out: you have to leave the TV off during meals to see these benefits.

    http://www.adajournal.org/article/S0002-8223(07)00015-6/abstract

  • Narelle @ CookCleanCraft

    I grew up with family dinners, but it was always with the TV on (and fights over which kid got the TV seat at the dinner table and who sat with their back to the TV.). I’m trying to convince my hubby that we should have the TV off during dinner.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      At my dad’s house growing up, we mostly at on TV trays while watching TV.
      I’m not 100% convinced that it was a bad thing, though — I have a lot of
      fond memories of those times!

  • Pippi

    We sit down to a family dinner almost every night (my oldest is 3 so we don’t have lots of activities yet) and I love it! When I was a kid, though, we almost never had family meals and it never bothered me and I was well adjusted and excelled at school. We bonded in others ways and even though family dinners are important for me as a parent I don’t regret not having them as a child. Afunctional family can come in many different forms.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I think this is a great point, Pippi. For many people, it does become that
      meaningful time to connect, but there are ways to connect without it AND I
      know of a family who strictly enforced the dinner together rule and now as
      adults none of the kids are even speaking to each other. So it’s obviously
      not a magic formula either!

  • http://www.itsawahmlife.com Jackie Lee

    We eat together every night, although it is in front of the TV. I’d like to start trying to turn the TV off at least some nights… I think the conversation that could happen would be wonderful. Meals together were non negotiable at my house, at times to the detriment of the people who lived there (waiting to eat until 9 at night when my dad was running late). So I am hoping to create a tradition of eating together, but it still being fun, and something we all look forward to. My kiddo is only 4 so we’re still trying to figure out what exactly that looks like for us.

    • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      Great point, Jackie Lee — sometimes we have the best intentions, but we end
      up missing the spirit of it by sticking to the letter of the law!

  • Ali100

    hey niggas

  • Ali100

    hey niggas

  • Charley

    We were unfortunate enough to get caught in a “too good to be true” RCI timeshare deal. My kids have been able to use points for low season bookings at so-so resorts, but my husband and I want to vacation in the sun in January – sorry – nothing is ever available. Lesson learned – save the membership fee $ and book through our local travel agent who is on top of all the good deals to the sun.

  • http://yourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

    LOL, so true, Theresa!

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