Kids Safety Network

Mom Makes 5-Year-Old ‘Pay Rent’ To Learn Responsibility

Each and every parent has a their own unique approach on how they teach their children how to be responsible.

But one mom’s method is by making her child pay for rent, water, electricity, cable and food!

Sound a bit much? 

Essence Evans daughter is just 5-years-old. She gives her an allowance of $7 every week and takes $5 back for all the bills.

The other $2 her daughter gets to save.

Evans said that this method prepares her child for the real world out there.

“Now, what she doesn’t know is the $5 is actually going away in her savings account which I will give back to her when she turns 18. So if she decides to move out on her own she will have $3,380 to start off,” the mother wrote on Facebook.

 

What do you think about Evans’ method?

In which way do you teach your child about responsibility?

Experts Say Parents Feed Babies Solid Food Too Soon

Are Americans feeding their babies solid foods way too early?

A group of child-feeding advocates say yes – and that the move to feed babies solids early can follow them for the rest of their lives.

The group, named thousanddays.org, examined nutrition for babies in America.

Thousand days refers to pregnancy through the first two years after birth. Its research indicates that nearly 40 percent of parents are introducing solids too early and that only 22 percent of babies are exclusively breastfed for six months.

Thousanddays.org said that more than half of moms say they are getting mixed messages on what to feed their babies.

So what are parents feeding their babies and when?

Chloe Barrera with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that she oversaw a study that took a look at what 1,482 babies from the age of 6 to 36 months ate.

Parents told researchers that when they first ate food that wasn’t formula or breast milk.

Other foods included juice, cow’s milk, baby food or other solids. About two-thirds of families were not following the official recommendations. Some parents introduced foods too early, or before 4 months even (16.3 percent) , many (38.3 percent) gave food to their babies between 4 and 5 months, while some held off solid foods until 7 or more months (12.9 percent).

Barrera’s study has been published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

But study authors say the numbers may be worse than reported since research depended upon self-reporting and that parents who know the recommendations may have under-reported the ages of their children and when they fed them solid foods, Huffington Post reported.

Experts say that babies should be either breastfed or formula fed for their first 6 months because those foods have the nutrients babies need for development.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Health and Human Services are both working on federal guidelines for children under 2 years old.

The guidelines are expected to be released in 2020, Huffington Post recently reported.

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