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Bedtime Picture Routine Chart for ChildrenA Visual Schedule Helps Kids Get Ready for Bed at Night
Put children in charge of getting ready for bed with a nighttime routine chart. Use pictures to create a visual schedule of a child's bedtime routine.
A bedtime picture routine chart helps kids learn a bedtime routine and helps kids get ready for bed. A bedtime picture routine charts is simply a visual schedule of a child's nighttime routine. Help your child learn to get ready for bed and stick to a bedtime routine by making a picture routine chart with your child. Decide the Schedule for a Child’s Bedtime RoutineCreate a bedtime schedule with your child. Ask your child what things he or she needs to do each night to get ready for bed. Invite your child to think about what things need to be done first in the bedtime routine and what things need to be done later in the bedtime routine. Find or Make Pictures for a Bedtime Routine ChartThere are many ways to create a visual schedule for a child’s routine chart. Choose any of the suggestions below or think of your own.
Make a Bedtime Picture Routine Chart with Your ChildGet your child involved in making the picture routine chart. Children can complete tasks such as cutting pictures out of magazines and pasting pictures onto the bedtime routine chart. Children will have more ownership in their visual nighttime schedule and will be more likely to cooperate with their bedtime routine chart if they have been involved in making the chart. Decide on a Beginning Time and Ending Time for the Bedtime RoutineIt’s important to have a starting and ending time for the bedtime routine. Estimate how long the bedtime routine might take and add five more minutes. Start the bedtime routine so that your child will be in bed at the correct time. The ending time will be the time you decide is your child’s bedtime. Try out the bedtime routine and see how it works, then make adjustments if needed. Example: If you want your child in bed at 8:30 p.m. and the bedtime routine takes 20 minutes, the start time for the bedtime routine will be 8:10 p.m.
Make sure your child knows that the bedtime routine has an ending time. Create your child’s bedtime routine so that the important steps such as brushing teeth and putting on pajamas are early in the bedtime routine and extras such as reading books are at the end of the bedtime routine. In the example above, the bedtime routine ends at 8:30 p.m. and bedtime is at 8:30 p.m. So if a child has only brushed his teeth, washed his face and put on his pajamas by 8:30 p.m., then the bedtime routine is over and it is now the child’s bedtime. Of course, it is the parent’s or caregiver’s job to make sure that the routine starts on time. Be flexible when you need to with bedtime routine charts. Use them as a guide and not a rulebook. Practice the Bedtime Routine Chart Each NightIn order for children to learn a bedtime routine and be in charge of a picture routine chart, children must use the chart. Although it can be boring for adults to follow the bedtime routine chart each time, having a bedtime routine provides comfort and structure for young children. The book Positive Discipline for Preschoolers [Prima Publishing, 1998] recommends the following tips for creating a bedtime routine with children.
Additional Resources About Bedtime and Routine ChartsFor more tips on creating and using routine charts with children, read Morning Picture Routine Chart for Kids and Routine Charts Versus Reward Charts for Children. Listen to a free podcast of author, Jane Nelsen discussing bedtime issues with children on Focusing on Solutions Podcast #41. Although bedtime routine charts require time to prepare, they save time and energy each night for parents when getting kids ready for bed. Routine charts work well for parents because children take more ownership over their bedtime schedule which reduces parental nagging. Picture routine charts help children learn independence, structure and know what to expect at bedtime. References: Jane Nelsen, Cheryl Erwin, Rosalyn Duffy, Positve Discipline for Preschoolers, Prima Publishing, 1998.
The copyright of the article Bedtime Picture Routine Chart for Children in Parenting Resources is owned by Kelly Pfeiffer. Permission to republish Bedtime Picture Routine Chart for Children in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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