Posts tagged ‘education’
Make It Your Mission! Part 5
Attend a trade show or conference with some of your fellow advocates and/or a parent that is in alignment with your mission.
(Maybe one of your new email pen pals will also be attending and you can meet!)
Walk the exhibit floor and see what other people are doing that you could work into your plans.
Talk to the people at the booths that are interesting to you and tell them about what you are doing. Get their feedback on other things you might want to try to get the word out or how your two groups could work together to accomplish your goals.
Audible Feast
As we all know, variety is the spice of life…but many of us get stuck in a rut when it comes to the musical genres to which we will listen.
When you think about it, though, music is much like food in the sense that just because you don’t like salmon cooked a certain way at one restaurant doesn’t mean you won’t devour it when it’s cooked differently by another chef.
Commit to spending at least ONE hour this week experiencing an out-of-the-ordinary musical genre as a family. You don’t need to love it, but try to appreciate the layers and complexity of each “taste” you get just as you (the parents, of course) would if you went wine tasting.
Luckily, this exercise is piece of cake in the age of cable, satellite TV and the Internet. Go to one of the music channels that you wouldn’t normally select on your preferred device, put on the timer for an hour, then PUT DOWN THE MOUSE or remote.
Unless there’s a lot of profanity in the lyrics, don’t change the station or turn off the channel.
What instruments do you hear in the music? Are they different or similar to the ones used in the music you nomally listen to? How do the rhythms differ? What do you think of the lyrics? Is the music melodic or dissonant? Is there more of a variation in dynamics (e.g. transitions from loud to soft or vice-versa)?
Just like you would find in your normal genres, you’ll hear artists you enjoy listening to more than others…and if you’re using a service like Pandora, Slacker, or Spotify, you can customize the new genre to suit your family’s musical “taste buds”.
So, belly-up to a Song Smorgasbord this weekend and sample some new musical delights.
Bon appetit!
Cardboard Kingdom
Developed by Laura Manriquez of Santa Barbara’s Kids Love Art! program. Used with permission.
The parents I know always remark after birthdays and holidays that their kids seem to have more fun with the BOXES than the toys inside. This activity makes boxes into toys with a visual/spatial project for the kids, too.
All you need is a standard sized moving box and tempera paints, but extra construction paper, paper towel rolls, cardboard, etc. can help make the kingdom more intricate and really flex those spatial smarts.
The resulting kingdom (or whatever your child wants the diorama to be…a firehouse…or fortress…or racetrack.) is the ideal size for Polly Pocket, LEGO people, Fisher-Price little people, GI Joes or matchbox cars to call home. Which is the real genius in this project—the Kingdom can also create a home on a shelf for all the little toys you have lying around the house.
Get in Gear for Back-to-School :: LANGUAGE ARTS
One day closer to the first day of school…
Below, we’ve compiled our favorite 10 language arts activities we’ve featured over the summer (as well as our Summer Reading Lists) to make sure your child gets in gear ahead of time and practices some of the concepts that they learned last year—in a FUN way—below. (That is, if your school follows the Core Standards.)
- Paint by Part of Speech – or make up a new “legend” based on grade level standards (e.g. long and short a-e-i-o-u in words)
- Color De-Coding – for word decoding and spelling “trick” practice
- Worldly Words – skim, scan and summarize informational texts
- Skillful Singing – for lyrical language rule reminders
- Become a Story Sleuth – for reading comprehension detective work
- Tongue Twisters – an active way to brush up on sentence structure
- Scripted Summer – for dramatic reading fun
- Starstruck Storytime – celestial mythology
- Innerspace List Poems – for poetry practice
- You’ll Hit It Out of the Park with Me in Your Corner – idiom fun
RECOMMENDED READING LISTS
for kids that particularly enjoy dabbling in specific Multiple Intelligence types.
- For the Picture Smart Child (AKA Visual-Spatial Intelligence)
- For the Nature Smart Child (AKA Naturistic Intelligence)
- For the Number Smart Child (AKA Logical-Mathematical Intelligence)
- For the Music Smart Child (AKA Musical Intelligence)
- For the Body Smart Child (AKA Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence)
- For the Self Smart Child (AKA Intrapersonal Intelligence)
- For the People Smart Child (AKA Interpersonal Intelligence)
- For the Word Smart Child (AKA Verbal-Linguistic Intelligence)
Get in Gear for Back-to-School :: MATH
The countdown to the school bell on the first day of school is officially upon us! In fact, many teachers were required to report for duty today.
We’ve compiled some of our favorite math activities we’ve featured on our blog to make sure your child gets in gear ahead of time and practices some of the concepts that they learned last year—in a FUN way—below. (That is, if your school follows the Core Standards.)
Math Frisbee Golf – for active nature lovers.
Become a Story Sleuth – for “word smart” kids.
Score Well in Math – for sports lovers.
Now You’re Cooking! – for worldly/foodie kids.
Thumb Ball – for fast-paced family time.
Sew Cool – for crafty kids.
Touchy Touchy – for dramatic kids.
Calculation Compositions – for musical kids.
Room Re-Arrangement – for visual/spatial kids.
Nutrition Math – for healthy families.
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