The secret to training kids to sleep

Two psychologists say it’s not the technique you use; what’s critical is when you use it

by Julia McKinnell on Thursday, April 2, 2009 10:00am - 7 Comments

The secret to training kids to sleepIf you’ve ever tried sleep training or “Ferberizing” a wailing baby to disastrous effect, two Canadian scientists may have the magic solution. Husband-and-wife team Marc Lewis and Isabela Granic are developmental child psychologists with twin three-year-olds. In their new book Bed Timing, the couple writes, “There are certain ages at which babies and toddlers are ready to learn to fall asleep easily and stay asleep through most if not all of the night. Knowing when to sleep train is more important than knowing how.”

There are, they say, five windows of opportunity between birth and age four during which sleep training is both doable and easy. “Part of our incentive for starting this book was that a lot of people started Ferberizing at these crazy ages of eight and nine months, and at 18 months, and they said, ‘This strategy doesn’t work. It sucks. It’s terrible,’ ” said Granic in a phone interview from the couple’s Toronto home. “And really, if they’d waited two or three more months, it could’ve worked beautifully for them. We tried to make the book complete,” she adds. “There is a chapter that summarizes the top five sleep training techniques,” including the now famous Dr. Richard Ferber’s method, Jodi Mindell’s Sleeping Through the Night and Marc Weissbluth’s Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child.

Parents should select a training method they’re comfortable with. A chart at the back of Bed Timing outlines the optimal windows between birth and age four for applying the technique. For instance, Lewis and Granic say that a newborn younger than 2½ months is too unstable to properly sleep train. “Quite literally, they’re overwhelmed by their emotions,” said Granic. “You’ll see a newborn start to cry and they have no capacity to pull themselves down. They can’t do it.” In the book, the couple suggests instead, “rocking, bouncing, cuddling, and gliding” at this stage. “Anything you do, you can undo with proper sleep training at a later stage of development.” It’s “remarkable,” said Granic, “how nice it is for some parents to hear it’s okay it didn’t work when they first tried it. Most parents are distressed by the fact this feels like it’s going to last forever. A big message from us is just wait for the next stage.”

The first good opportunity for sleep training is between 2½ and four months, they feel. “This is a period of relative stability and resilience,” the authors write. “There is no good reason not to try sleep training at this age if your intuition says ‘go.’ ” When babies are four to 5½ months is not a good time because “at four months, there’s a lot more smiling, giggling, and tickling games are starting to work,” said Lewis. “As your baby learns new interpersonal skills—skills that call for expected responses from you and lead to a stronger bond between you—it’s better not to disturb them until they’ve really begun to solidify.”

Personally, Granic and Lewis chose to Ferberize their sons at six months. The couple believe that at 5½ to 7½ months, “babies are engaged with the world of objects around them [more than they are with people] and show almost no sign of separation distress.” It’s an ideal time to sleep train, they say. “To really get a full night’s sleep,” they tell parents, “you’ll need to eliminate night feeding. Try gradually reorganizing your baby’s feeding schedule so that he consumes most of his nourishment during the day.”

The next bad period is eight to 11 months, when “separation now means something to your baby—that you’re not responding to his attempts to bring you back—which can be upsetting and traumatic for your baby, and destructive to your attempts.” Do not sleep train at this age. Instead, “be responsive to your baby’s need,” they write. “This stage will pass!”

The couple notes that some parents feel guilty about any kind of sleep training. “Training is something you do with a pet, after all.” Mothers in particular “are often given the message that their first and only priority should be their child’s happiness”—not their own need for sleep. “We want to dispel this dangerous myth,” they write. “Your sleep is as important as your baby’s.” Says Lewis, “It’s heartbreaking what some people will put up with because they’re really a mess for the first two years of the kid’s life. Our premise is, if you do sleep training well at the right age, it’s going to sink in, and then you don’t have to worry about it for a long time, maybe never. Once kids get in the habit of falling asleep when you want them to, they can stay in that habit for a good long time.”

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  • Poppy Hearst

    I am a mother of four highly successful young adults. I also helped “coach” my daughters in teaching their babies how to sleep. The operative words are predictability and routine. All babies and children thrive on and love routine. Reading to a three month old at the same time each night followed by a lullaby in a rocking chair has been the magic formula for all the children in this family. Read the book by all means ( makes good sense ) but make it easy on yourself and follow our common sense formula. ( If a baby cries a great deal or seems colicky seek medical help to rule out any underlying medical concerns).

    • Vicki

      As a mother of a “wakeful” 9-month old, I found this article to be helpful. I believe that routine is important, but it hasn’t worked for us at all. My baby girl has her dinner, bath time, story time, and then rocking every night at the same time. She falls asleep wonderfully, but will nevertheless wake up 2 to 4 times every night. She is completely dependent on being lulled back to sleep by either myself or my husband. Routine and predictability aren’t really our allies – they have only taught our little one that she needs to be rocked back to sleep when she wakes at night.

      We had been putting off using the Ferber method, but recently decided that we may have to start firmer sleep training. This article made me realize that this might not be the best time to start sleep training as separation anxiety is high. I will definitely get a copy of this book and hope to god that it gives us some useful advice on training our little peanut to soothe herself to sleep.

      • Nathalie

        Hi Vicki. When my son was 10 months old I decided I’d had enough. I was in a similar position as you with the bedtime routine in place, followed by waking every 2 hours through the night. It was as though the waking had become part of the routine! I don’t dispute any advice the book may offer, but I will say that there are ways to sooth a child without destroying the trust or increasing separation anxiety. For myself, I chose to take the approach of letting my very stubborn 10 months old cry for 10 minutes, then I would enter the room, pat him on the back and say do do (or whatever word you use to trigger sleep). I would then leave the room and wait another 10 minutes and then do the same. By doing this I felt certain he new I was not abandoning him, and yet I was standing firm. The first night it took maybe 1 hours of in and out every ten minutes. 3 times that night. By night two he only woke twice and it took about 20-30 minutes to settle him using this method. The third night he woke once- and believe it or not, since then he has been sleeping through the night (12 hours) about 98% of the time- better than my daughter who is 18 months older. Don’t put off your sanity any longer than you have to. I feel for you having been there myself. I think someone we fear the psychological effects of our actions, when I have come to believe that if we simply take a firm but loving approach to discipline of all kinds with our children, we will succeed in making them independent, self soothing little people. Good luck!

        • Sonia

          Nathalie – was he still upset when you left the room after 10 minutes? I've tried this with my four month old and he just gets more upset when I come in because he wants me to pick him up. Hasn't worked very well for me but he might be too young.

  • http://fulldiziizle.biz dizi izle

    thank you very much :)

  • Corina

    this is a helpful tool. My son is 11 months old and getting harder and harder to put to sleep. He does not nurse to sleep and takes a long time to be rocked, but will not be put down awake. have i missed the window?

  • Beckie

    My daughter has slept from 10-12 hours a night since she was 2 months old and now she is 4 months old. Over the past 3 weeks she has started waking up once in the middle of the night to eat and won't sleep longer than about 7-8 hours in a row. Is this normal? Will she ever go back to her old sleeping pattern?

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