Making Home Theaters
Family-Friendly, Educational
Shying away from creating a home theater because of your
kids?
If your concern is that youngsters will
spend all their time in a home theater watching movies rather
than doing other things, think again. The creation of a home
theater doesn't have to turn a family into a bunch of couch
potatoes. In fact, with some careful planning and enforced
ground rules, a home theater can serve as an exercise room and
an extra classroom, too.
If you have the space, when you're planning your home theater,
leave some room for little, little ones to move around and even
jump around. Buy a few kids' exercise videos to include in your
repertoire of movies and tapes. Encourage them to use them on a
regular basis by getting in on the act yourself.
Should educational programming be your concern, buy your
DVDs wisely. This means picking titles that provide educational
value, too. Also, use cable or satellite programming to your
advantage. Subscribe to stations that offer an educational
element such as National Geographic, The History Channel and
more. Make these a required family activity to watch
together.
Create a strategy to turn your home theater into a place for
family gatherings. Watching television in a home theater
doesn't have to be a solitary pursuit and it doesn't have to
just be about "feel good movies." Include titles in your
collection that will appeal to the entire family and discuss
the movies when they're over. Television and movie watching can
be a great way to get the family together and it doesn't cost a
fortune.
Other ideas for making a home theater family
friendly include:
- Buying classic television shows on DVD that don't
include all the violence found on many shows today. Take a
walk down memory lane with your children with such shows as
"Little House on the Prairie" and "The Waltons." These
shows, too, will help reinforce good values.
- Make conversation a normal part of movie watching.
Discuss scenes, plots and more with each other. With older
children, get them to think on their feet by asking
questions about character development and more. Challenge
them to analyze meanings, characters and more.
- Don't be afraid to make the home theater off limits if
other activities, like homework, aren't pursued first.
A home theater doesn't have to mean death to family life. If
you monitor viewing and limit watching times, the room could
work well to your advantage. Television and home theaters are
tools for entertainment and education if you use them
correctly.
|