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Advice to Parents
As parents, carers and family members you have a
huge role to play in your children’s physical, social and emotional health and
well-being.
What your child eats and drinks, how active they are
and how they feel about themselves has a big effect on their health now and in
the future.
By working together with the school, you can make a
real difference to your child’s health by giving them good advice and helping
them to have a healthy lifestyle.
What is the school
doing?
We are actively promoting health through becoming a
Health Promoting
School, working with a wide range of partners to:
| Providing a happy, safe, supportive and secure environment for
learning support and encouraging children, parents and staff to become
involved in making healthier choices about lifestyle |
| teaching children about a wide variety of health topics such as
healthy eating, physical activity, relationships, drugs, smoking and alcohol
issues that can really affect their lives. |

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How can your child
benefit?
If children get the same messages at
home and at school they are much more likely to make healthier lifestyle
choices.
By encouraging your child to eat
healthily and be physically active you will help them to do better at school.
With a balanced diet, regular physical
activity and the confidence to make good lifestyle choices, your child will:
| have more energy |
| have a more positive happy outlook |
| be able to concentrate better |
| stay at a healthy weight |
| get fewer illnesses |
| feel less stressed |
| not get bored so easily |
| sleep better at night. |
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Healthy Eating
- The facts
There has been an increase in children
who are overweight.
The right balance of foods will give
your child all the nutrients they need for healthy growth and development.
A balanced diet also helps to reduce the
risk of serious diseases later in life.
However, many children and young people
have unhealthy eating habits.
| 53% drink fizzy or sugary drinks at least
once a day. |
| 16% eat fresh fruit only once a week or
less. |
| 40% eat vegetables only once a week or
less. |
| 24% don’t eat breakfast. |
| 40% eat chocolate, crisps or biscuits more
than once a day. |
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What can you do?
Please make sure the family eats healthy
meals at home.
You can get advice on healthy eating
from a wide variety of places including your doctor, health visitor, public
health nurse and health centre.
Involve your child in cooking and
preparing meals at home.
Encourage your child to eat school
lunches.
These lunches have improved, since the
Jamie Oliver campaign.
There are more choices and the food is
now better quality, tastier and healthier.
Think about healthy options for snacks
and lunchboxes.

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Physical activity - the facts
As a nation, we are not active or fit
enough and are increasingly overweight.
Two-thirds of us are at risk of serious
health problems as a result of our inactivity.
This trend starts before we leave
school.
For children to be healthy they need at
least one hour of physical activity a day but 27% of boys and 40% of girls are
not doing this.
If your child is active every day, they
will feel better, physically and mentally.
It helps them to relax, relieves stress,
stops them getting bored and gives them more energy.

What can you do?
Encourage and support your child to take
part in extra-curricular activities (dance, sports, games) at school.
As well as keeping them active, these
activities provide a good opportunity for your child to meet friends and make
new ones.
Your child doesn’t have to be good at
sport to be active!
Small changes to their everyday routine,
such as walking or cycling to school instead of going by bus or car, will give
them an opportunity to be more active.
Leisure activities with friends or
family, such as playing football, going swimming, ten-pin bowling, dancing,
skateboarding or rollerblading, are a great way to keep active, socialise and
have fun at the same time.
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Emotional well-being – the facts
Good mental and emotional health is very
important for general well-being.
There are strong links between
children’s emotional well-being and their personal, social development and
academic and other achievements.
One in ten children and young people
experience mental and emotional health problems which impact on their thoughts,
feelings, behaviour, learning and relationships on a daily basis.
Schools can support children to feel
good about themselves by providing a happy, safe, supportive and secure
environment.
Emotional health affects everyone's
quality of life.
To be emotionally well your child needs
to feel loved, trusted, valued and
understood.
What can you do?
Try to make sure your child eats well,
gets enough sleep, is physically active and has time to relax.
Take time to listen and talk to your
child about the things that matter to them or concern them and give support when
they need it.
Encourage your child to think
positively, to set realistic goals for themselves in life and take things one
step at a time.
Discuss their goals with them and offer
praise when these are achieved.
It is important to remember that stress
is a natural part of life.
It only becomes harmful when the
problems and hassles of daily life overwhelm your child.
There are times when your child may feel
stressed by things like exams, bullying, or family problems.
Let the school know as soon as possible
about any problem your child is having so that they can support and help you to
resolve the problem.
