Home => Newsletters => June 7, 2005 • Family Meals Focus #2 • Guidelines for Feeding
June 2005 FAMILY MEALS FOCUS #2 Interpreting the news and research about feeding and eating
GUIDELINES FOR FEEDING
Throughout the growing-up years, Ellyn Satter's division of responsibility in feeding integrates guidelines for evidence-based feeding with a developmental understanding of the child.
Children are born wanting to eat, knowing how much to eat and inclined to grow in the way that nature intended. Good parenting with feeding preserves those qualities throughout the growing-up years. Parents provide structure, support and opportunities. Children choose how much and whether to eat from what the parents provide.
The Division of Responsibility for Infants:
- The parent is responsible for what
- The child is responsible for how much (and everything else)
The parent helps the infant to be calm and organized and feeds smoothly, paying attention to information coming from the baby about timing, tempo, frequency and amounts
The Division of Responsibility For Toddlers Through Adolescents:
- The parent is responsible for what, when, where
- The child is responsible for how much and whether
Jobs parents need to do with feeding include:
- Choose and prepare the food
- Provide regular meals and snacks
- Make eating times pleasant
- Show children what they have to learn about food and mealtime behavior
- Not let children graze for food or beverages between times
- Let children grow up to get bodies that are right for them
Fundamental to parents, jobs is trusting children to decide how much and whether to eat. If parents do their jobs with feeding, children do their jobs with eating:
- Children will eat
- They will eat the amount they need
- They will eat an increasing variety of food
- They will grow predictably
- They will learn to behave well at the table
Crossing the lines of Ellyn Satter's Division of Responsibility in Feeding is likely to create feeding problems and distort growth. Trying to control what or how much a child eats or how his body turns out crosses the lines. So does letting the child dictate the family menu.
Properly executed, the division of responsibility addresses concerns about optimum feeding, such as breastfeeding promotion and support, and concerns about food selection and the food supply, such as encouraging fruits and vegetables and responsible use of fat and sugar. It also addresses concerns about the larger food environment, such as too-ready access to soda, fast food, large portion sizes and advertising directed at children.
For a further explanation of the division of responsibility, see any of Ellyn Satter's four books;
Your Child's Weight: Helping Without Harming
,
Child of Mine: Feeding With Love and Good Sense
,
Secrets of Feeding a Healthy Family
, or
How To Get Your Kid To Eat... But Not Too Much
.
Family Meals Focus by Ellyn Satter, MS, RD, LCSW, BCD. discusses trends, research and clinical issues in eating and feeding and interprets other research from a feeding-dynamics, eating-competence perspective. For past issues of Family Meals Focus, click
here.
Copyright © 2012 by Ellyn Satter. Published at www.EllynSatter.com.
Rights to reproduce: As long as you leave it unchanged, you don't charge for it, and you include the entire copyright statement, you may reproduce this article. Please let us know you have used it by sending a website link or an electronic copy to info@ellynsatter.com.
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