Sunday, September 28, 2014

Our Relaxing - Insect Hydration - Chamber for Pinning Bugs

We found a very, very, very small wasp on our sidewalk today. So small he was a must keep!! When I held him by the leg, I tried to push in another leg, which when a fresh specimen just dies it stays flexible. His leg was very firm. That's an indication that when we try to pin him his legs or head may POP off, dice he's starting to harden. That's when we know we need to relax the insect in preparation for pinning.

Our Relaxing - Insect Hydration - Chamber for Pinning Bugs

Here I'm using a glass jar with a tight fitting lid, and another smaller container, prescription bottle sized, to hold a 50/50 mix of pine sol and water.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes

Everyday math: please correct this serious mistake!
It's only week number three of the school year, and we are reviewing things we my older son should've learned in 3rd grade, here it's parallelograms.

In unit 1 study links (homework page) 1.4 question 2a. The question: Is a square a rhombus? My son brought home tees review sheets which lacked pictures of parallelograms and some further explanations. Using some of my mommy resources I pulled out a geometry book I had from my brothers recent High School SAT / ACT prep books, I tore out the relevant pictures and tapes them to the fridge, including some definitions of squares, rhombus and rectangles. These items may be in my sons fourth grade text book, however he hasn't been encouraged to bring his text book home.

Homework sheet, study links in Everyday math
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes by areyousureaboutthatblog
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr.


(As an aside, this was a good opportunity to build our vocabulary on Polygons, and the names of other many sides shapes. We googled a list and mom hand drew a chart for the fridge. Part of "moms homework" my son needed to review these Polygons daily and into week two I was quizzing him on the names.)

Our homemade homework supplement, a picture guide to polygons
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes by areyousureaboutthatblog
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr


The premise of this study link is a parallelogram is a quadrangle that has two pairs of parallels idea. TRUE! However there's a second factor not covered here, and that's a square has four-right angles as well (it's really a 2-part definition you can see in the geometry books definition).

Geometry book helper page
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes by areyousureaboutthatblog
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr.

I realize the objective was to help students understand in this specific lesson that a square is a quadrangle (a 4 sided object) ... However the answer is not YES as the answer guide dictates.

The answer sheet
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes by areyousureaboutthatblog
Is a square a rhombus? When Everyday Math makes mistakes, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr


Drawing certain conclusion based on similarities is fine, however generalizing is not. Or removing portions if definition isn't right either. The definition of a square, and a rhombus, was coincidentally on our fridge sheets. I encouraged my son to write the correct answer - No, and write our definition. The parent guide stated the opposite and I didn't eat to encourage him learning a wrong fact, for the sake if this one work sheet, to only relearn the information (hopefully) in a later grade.


Make mistakes, (fix them) breathe, reflect and Laugh.Out.Loud.

After watching PBS Baby Girl wanted to Bake a Cake, When Inspiration Strikes

You can't run away from kids when inspiration strikes! And it strikes often. So as a parent we need I decide are we going to squash their curiosity because "No, not now honey, mommy a busy..." Or take the other path and make their desires happen.

We chose the latter. However not instantly. And it really doesn't matter when you do the activity kids want, just make sure you do it. That same afternoon is better then the next day, simply because the inspiration may pass and become DisInterest ... But try, that's what's important to keep kids learning.

(Bonus: our New York Style cheesecake recipe is listed here at the end of the page.) Mommy was writing insect labels in the kitchen, so when I finished "my job" I was gonna help bake a cake. Mommy clarified that even tho it was Daniel Tigers birthday, it's not baby girls birthday. She wanted a chocolate cake, however mommy didn't have chocolate cake ingredients. But we could make a flan or a Cheesecake. "Ooo mommy I love cheesecake!" Luckily mommy does too.

After watching PBS Baby Girl wanted to Bake a Cake by areyousureaboutthatblog
After watching PBS Baby Girl wanted to Bake a Cake, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr


We pulled out our ingredients, and since I recently got I rid of our microwave (since the last button -One Minute - finally died) we have loads of counter space! Baby mixed in the graham crackers and butter. She poured the ingredients mommy measured into the food processor. She also pushed all the buttons, which was her favorite part.... Until she got to lick the spoon.


After watching PBS Baby Girl wanted to Bake a Cake by areyousureaboutthatblog
After watching PBS Baby Girl wanted to Bake a Cake, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr

When inspiration strikes, enjoy the moment and hopefully get a special treat out of it. 

-------------------------------------
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New York Style Cheesecake

Original recipe makes 1 9-inch springform pan 
15 graham crackers, crushed
2 tablespoons butter, melted

4 (8 ounce) packages cream cheese
1 1/2 cups white sugar
3/4 cup milk
4 eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
Check All Add to Shopping List

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Grease a 9 inch springform pan.

In a medium bowl, mix graham cracker crumbs with melted butter. Press onto bottom of springform pan.
In a large bowl, mix cream cheese with sugar until smooth. Blend in milk, and then mix in the eggs one at a time, mixing just enough to incorporate. Mix in sour cream, vanilla and flour until smooth. Pour filling into prepared crust. Wrap springform pan in foil. Make a water bath for cheesecake.

Bake in preheated oven for 1 hour. Turn the oven off, and let cake cool in oven with the door open  for 1. Then cool in fridge in springform pan for additional 3 hours; this prevents cracking. Chill in refrigerator until serving.

((In our pics you can see a can of sweetened condensed milk (which is basically milk and sugar) leftover from our Spanish style Mango smoothie. We added half a can and guesstimated milk and sugar. I assumed it was roughly worth 1/4 cup milk and 1/4 cup sugar, reducing the ingredients accordingly. After running the food processor we tasted the batter for sweetness and texture. We could always add more milk or sugar if needed, which it didn't.))
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Make mistakes. Breathe, reflect and Laugh.Out.Loud

Want kids to get interested? Leave books laying around

Ever since my older son was a baby we had books around. Not only baby books but wonderful and richly colored and pictured animal books. Books on people, places, building with Legos, and babies eating. Leaving my own resources around and accessible to the kids allows them to thumb thru things they might find interesting, pictures that catch their eye.


Here it seems baby girl has a thing for spiders! She loves them. I picked up 2 library books on trap door spiders and jumping spiders - he wants to read them every night. These books aren't her level, they have 2 pictures on the open pages and are copy heavy, but she loves hearing about how the spiders live, where try lay eggs, and what they eat.

She's learning about things beyond the book subject too:
-- like research, when mommy looks up a new bug to our collection,

--concentration and patience as she thumbs thru this 250 page reference books to find more spiders

-- she sees there's MORE in the book then just spiders, finding literally thousands of insects!

Kids are sponges, we just need to give them access.


Want kids to get interested? Leave books laying around by areyousureaboutthatblog
Want kids to get interested? Leave books laying around, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr.

Bug Collecting with Kids - Showing off their Insect Specimen

Bug collecting has become something more then a hobby for our family. At 1,000 + specimens I am wondering if it's our obsession? We end up collecting everywhere we go. We recently were at a friends house warming party, and we brought our bug collection jars, yes really! The jars go everywhere with us. Turns out our friends are on an acre of land with an amazing Prarie in their backyard. So with my after dessert coffee in tow, as well as baby girl, we hit the yard. 

Bug Collecting with Kids - Showing off their Insect Specimen


Quietly. I don't make a big deal about collecting, we just take our jars an go off to look at plants, and under the leafs (where bugs often hide). We didn't get 10 steps in when I suddenly had 3 more kids following us asking loads of questions!
Kids are naturally curious, they want to know everything. So without agenda we answer their questions. The old me would have certain things I want to be sure to tell the kids, however I've learned over these 9 years of parenting that the core information does get across, even if it's in a simple discussion format. We talked about how we capture them, and then the kids true their attempts at capture. We put the jar over the bugs, and either "seal" them in plant and all like with the Leaf Hoppers that jump. Or with the green Dog Bane beetle, they just fall off the plant (that's their defense mechanism) into the jar.

The kids also learned quickly that bugs like the warmth of the sun. We didn't find any insects in the shade, and the few we did find that late in the afternoon (5:00 pm) were sitting on plants in the late afternoon sun.
The insects collected at Green Oaks (top row, from left, Wasp, leaf hopper, bottom row, dog bane beetle, assassin bug)



Thursday, September 11, 2014

When School Homework is Frustrating... why do it at all?

What is homework for? Is it just there to torture us parents? And our kids. Homework - as my Principal husband reiterated with me every year - is about building study habits. As a secondary element, it's supposed to reinforce what was learned in class that day. I totally understand the idea of building a study habit, because the kids that go to really great high schools don't whine and complain about homework. They also have already built the habit of school books and working at home in elementary school, so when homework is reading in preparation for the next days lesson, kids have the habit of actually doing the reading. (Not like me in high school, winging it from in class notes and not doing the reading.) So I've asked myself is elementary school homework all preparation for High School and college?
I don't always agree with my highly trained hubby. He is brilliant in his work. And he advocates for the children All.The.Time! However, as I am living the parent side of the experience. And I am opinionated, we will often discuss things at home. Poor guy!

We discussed which school to send older son too when contemplating Kindergarten. Private catholic school, CPS, or a gift school? Even homeschooling?  Ultimately, regardless of our pick of which school to attend, our conclusion was:

1. We can't replace the 7 hours of the day at school and rehash the day's learning at home in the evening. Therefore, we need to pick a school with solid teaching during those 7 hours.

2. Schools cannot possibly teach EVERYTHING. Some topics are broad strokes, covering the "big picture." Some concepts will get a "drill down" for a deeper understanding on concepts. But No Matter What the learning during the day - broad or in depth - we will have to supplement at home. Period. 

3. A lot of time at school is "eaten up" by routines to just get to what we need to learn. Taking 25-30 kids to the bathroom takes 15-20 minutes (by the time they line up and settle back down in class). So should the actual 5 ish hours of learning be done at home? Homeschooling isn't the answer for us either. I cannot replace a veteran teachers knowledge, nor a new teachers enthusiasm. I'm clever, but I'm not a mathematician who's arguably taught these lessons many, many times, developing an expertise.  And for us we recognize the social needs being addressed too. You'll see next how kindergarteners learn to listen, follow instructions, and ultimately grow on in grades to be good citizens. School is necessary.... But I can supplement at home.

So no matter what school we chose, I have a job at home. . . And I can attest this is true for Private and Public school!

When School Homework Gets it Wrong by areyousureaboutthatblog
When School Homework Gets it Wrong, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr.

As Charlotte Mason fans will attest, conducting a "study" of subjects is truly in-depth learning. Sometimes I feel our education system just scratches the surface of ideas. So my job has become to build on school topics, making my kids understanding of things richer and deeper. Supplementing with art projects, redoing a science experiment, borrowing library books, and going to museums to SEE and touch the dinosaurs, taxidermy animals in their habit, getting actual size perspective, etc.

That's where Homework plays a critical role for me as a parent. I can see daily, what they study, and the work they bring home, which helps me build my bridge to supplementing. I also needed to learn through the years, in addition to WHAT their learning at school (where I think most of us parents stop school thinking at) to really grasping HOW the kids are learning!!! And regardless if you do more work at home, WHAT and HOW kids learn is imperative to their success. And it's a great conversation for helping your kids at Parent Teacher conferences!!! See my 2 questions to ask at Parent Teacher conferences for more school learning tips.

HOW kids learn & What they learn by Grade - An Outline

Taking the information I've learned from my Principal husband, and my own obsessive reading of education publications, articles reviewing education studies, and witnessing education in action with my own kids, I've observed various school objectives. In the primary grades K-2, kids are "learning to learn," and I've blogged about that concept before. In Kindergarten kids are learning to pay attention to the teacher, following instructions. Classroom expectations (timeliness, tardiness, quiet time versus a louder interaction) and behaviour is learned as is handling differences with students. Then there's starting the basics of learning to write (recognizing letters, matching upper and lower case, understanding words are made up of letters, then letter formation, and so on), holding crayons, coloring with "lots if color and lots of detail," and coloring in the whole circle all the way to the line. Letters, and writing are the steps to "Learning to Read." Phonics and letter sounds start here, identifying pictures and the words that relate to them, and sight words starts here and continue through 3rd grade.

These coloring to the line builds to a concept of writing in 1st and 2nd grade, to write letters on dotted line starter sheets, that all touch the ground, and the uppercase "L" touches the SKY, and the lowercase "n" touches the fence. These years there also "learning to learn" math. That your not just reciting numbers, but Math is always counting something. Counting on fingers, number lines, marbles, blocks, and other support tools. Later in the year kids group blocks to SHOW 2 blocks + 2 blocks = 4 blocks.

By 3rd grade the basic Addition Math Facts should be nearly memorized 1 through 10. 1+0, 1+1, 1+2, 1+3,...2+0, 2+1, 2+2, 2+3,...all the way through 10+0, 10+1, 10+2, 10+3,...to 10+10. And there strategies for learning starting with "rules" like anything +0 is always the other number itself, for example 1+0=1, and 1,435+0 =1,435. I always wrote down the numbers in addition to reinforce verbally talking about it. Kids need to SEE and HEAR what the rules are. Then we learn doubles, an memorize them: 0+0=0, 1+1=2, 2+2=4, 3+3=6, etc. Once my son memorized the first group to get them right 7 or 8 out of 10 times asked, we moved on to the next set of 3 or 4 doubles mixing in the first group. This took about 3 months of work.

By 3rd grade kids are "Reading to Learn." But we cannot arrive at reading books to learn concepts with out the first two learning levels: learning How To learn, learning How To read. If you knew these concepts before today - your are an awesome parent. If you didn't, now you do, we parents are learning to learn to! Along with our kids - were learning HOW and WHAT they learn to help them along the way.

Homework, What's It For?

However, study's show that homework habits truly don't start until just before the middle school years. And to adopt progressive education and accept what studies have found this year the CPS Elementary School Alexander Hamilton has done away with homework for Kindergarten through 3rd grade, with plans to expand through 5th grade next year. I applaud this Principal for taking action. And we will see how this test case works out... time will tell the benefit of this behaviour. [In our home we would still read 15 minutes every day. Craft and play outside. No homework WOULD NOT be replaced by T.V. and iPads!]

Where does that leave me? If homework holds little value for my now 4th grader older son, yet carries weight on his grade, what to do?

-- First, we use it as "our time". He can add in details of his sharing his day, which the homework triggers memories from earlier in school day.

-- It IS habit building. So I add it to "it's YOUR Responsibility list" of his things to do at home. He has to do it, or his grade will suffer. And in life, I tell the kids, sometimes you don't have a choice of WHAT you can do, but you CAN choose your attitude, and if you do it well.

-- I also use it to build his self worth and pride. If the worksheets "wrong" he has the choice of erasing and doing it again, or getting the "F" - yes really, he makes that choice. I can't force my kid to love school, but we can teach them to be passionate about their QUALITY of work.

-- I can see if he learned that days topic at school and if he "gets" the subject being learned. If yes, we reinforce it a little. If he's struggling, like in multiplication in 3rd grade, we supplemented with math board games, online games like IExcel websites, dice games, etc. Then I'd "enrich his learning" by showing real life math examples - always - when he's just learning / struggling / or mastered a subject. I have $1.00, how many $0.39 cent apples can I buy to bake our apple pie this weekend? I need 4 pears for poached pear dessert, and there $1.00 each. How much are they (multiplication)? I have $5.00, when I pay for the pears, Not including tax, what is my change (subtraction)? (Math becomes Sociology / Economics conversation follows with "Mom, what's tax?" ... Supplementing continues in conversation and throughout our experiences together.)

Sometimes schools aren't 100% spot on, and in life what is 100% accurate? I'm Type A, and extremely detailed admittedly at about 93%. We work with what we have, and do our best to turn learnings, homework and the pain of it all, into lessons and life skills.

Much more on my switch to enrichment and Charlotte Mason like supplementing through Nature Study, Art Study and more in depth learning to follow over the next few months.

Make mistakes. Breathe, reflect, and Laugh.Out.Loud.

#WhyIStayed tweets remind me to teach my kids NOW. Take Responsibility, Steps to an Apology, Talking to Kids.

I've always been an advocate for taking responsibility for "what you did do" instead of telling me the typical kids (and often adult) reply "but he...". I didn't realize or actuality my "taking responsibility" philosophy until I had my kids.
As with most things, watching my kids interact it helps crystallize how I feel about the subjects and issues that come
up in real life via the news, NPR, Facebook and Twitter. This post goes a little around the bush when it comes to the issue around the #whyIstayed tweets highlighting that we should ask the abuser "why they hit/hurt" not ask the victim why they stayed. These tweets reminded me how we have come a Long way in our home to evolve and develop the philosophy to: *Take Responsability for what you did do.*

We humans don't naturally take well to "taking responsibility." It's so much easier to deflect, and blame people or inanimate objects: my computer isn't working, he didn't get me the file I needed in time to complete the summary, it's not my fault I had 2 hours of homework and I didn't finishy chores. However this no longer flies in our home. I started seeing my kids, and neighborhood kids telling stories with the *blame something* reason, and parents agreeing with their kid! These observations awakened my frustration when others don't take responsibility for their actions. And frankly when we parents and guardians don't teach our kids HOW to take responsibility.




Enough of the blame game.
#WhyIStayed tweets remind me to teach my kids NOW by areyousureaboutthatblog
#WhyIStayed tweets remind me to teach my kids NOW, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr.

How to Apologize

I once watched the Bachelor: the final rise ceremony (even tho I don't watch the series I always seem to catch this particular season end-episode) and observed the Worst Apology. A brief, insincere, "well I'm sorry for that." Clearly the crappy apology resonated with me because the next day I witnessed one of my older sons one-in-a-dozen apologize to his brother in a lame insincere way and because mom "said so." The TV shows fake apology irked me, and brought to my conscious surface the fact that I hate insincerity. Don't bother apologizing for the sake of saying the words, do it right or don't do it all. I want my boys "to do what's right BECAUSE it's the right thing to do." And do it correctly.

After these two a-ha moments, I googled a proper apology. I knew you needed to say "I am sorry" (while making eye-contact), but I even lacked knowing the other two important parts. A prope apology has 3-steps. First: Acknowledge what you DID do. Second: Saying I'm sorry. And Third: Making up for what you did.


"
The TV shows fake apology irked me,
 and brought to my conscious surface
 the fact that I hate insincerity. Don't
 bother apologizing for the sake of
saying the words, do it right or
don't do it all." 

For my kids the hardest learning was Acknowledge what YOU did. Kids readily say "I'm sorry I hit you... BUT don't take my toy from me." Instantly defeating the purpose of the apology and using the "BUT he" to instantly blaming the person they hurt. Or the alternative "But I didn't ... (Do what I'm being blamed for). The denial of the younger brother accusation, because the younger brother is slightly off in his explanation of what happened. I just shit it down! Mom says: "Take Responsibility for what you did do!" Oh my! The "But He" and "but I didn't" doesn't fly with that statement. It's not an open-ended "what did you do?" Instead it's direct because I'm telling them to step up and "take Responsibility." We've found that the key element.

I leaned early to teach the kids what "their Responsibility is." Granted after my young son was born this became easier because I witnessed that i am not an octopus and I can't do it all. I also didn't want entitled children - that's a separate blog post. So my standard line evolved. Feed the dog, it's your Responsibility. Clean your room, I don't play their, it's your Responsibility. And when my older son began to argue... Why do I have to empty the dish washer? I said for An Entire Summer in 2014 "it's your Responsibility. I have to make lunch, dinner, take care of baby girl, take care of everyone's laundry... Do You Do That? No! Because those are my responsibilities. Everyone in this house has a Responsibility, and for now, this one is yours." My older son couldn't argue his way outta that.

I'll ice the kids this: it's uber hard to stand their and just say what "you did" without blaming anyone or anything. Extremely difficult even for me as an adult. Taking full Responsibility for your share of the crime, wow! How rarely do we see that happen with adults, let alone kids?

I think I blogged previously of when my older son, then in kindergarten, needed to apologize to his teacher. I made him memorize the 3 steps, And repeat it a dozen times between 3 pm Wednesday and 8 am Thursday. (I am happy to report I'm a better mom and the apology system flows in our house thru practice now and not military drills.)

I personally have lived this apology style after teaching it to my kids. It really is very difficult to simply acknowledge only your portion of the act. But it's also EXTREMELY empowering. Borderline manipulative power. As an aside, when I've witnessed my kids enact the "take Responsibility for what YOU DID do."

Building Character thru Taking Responsibility

Which brings me to an interesting by product of the "take Responsibility" philosophy and "proper apology," building character. I read a fabulous book early in my older sons life titles "The Men they will become," which discussed how character forms and how boys become men. (I think I have blogged about how this book helped me also understand developing a boys "emotional toolbox," see those blog labels too.) He was 2 years old when I was learning about why we need to let boys make mistakes. And when boys take stupid risks, it's their natural way of learning (note: the stupid risks are arguably not INSANE and danger risk levels are curbed because we've done our parenting job and the little voice goes off in my sons head saying "this isn't a good idea!"). 


Mistakes are critical to child development. But we need to tell the kids, show them to learn from their mistake, and them it becomes a lesson! And a learning. All the while building character, because their doing things, and verbalizing emotionally difficult subjects, embarrassing ones. But I hope, that at this young age - if I ingrained that act of taking responsibility - maybe my kids will not take crazy risks. They've lived a difficult apology, and reparations which prepare them (the boys especially) for preventative good decision making.

Prevention

This parts lasts, because it started when my older son was 6 or so. You don't beat people up. You don't hit girls ever. You can restrain others from hitting you, but you don't start the fight. A gentleman defends his honor, and his family, but he doesn't provoke an attack.

I have also told my boys that when it's time to get married, pick a girl who speaks another language, who can cook as my kids will know how to cook well also), who loves you and who doesn't start fights with you. You shouldn't have to argue a lot.

These are simple principles, but their reiterated very often in our home. Very Often, as often as the dangers of crossing the street!!!

I hope all these values combined: "taking Responsability for what you did do, and reparations," help build their character. To do things in life that are difficult, and build their emotional toolbox.

Then the guiding values of the "qualities their partner should have" in addition to what the kids will eventually find attractive, will help them stay away from people who instigate, and those that live in anger.

And then there's this,....the Church forcing the issues 


#WhyIStayed tweets, we can't allow the church to hide it's abuses anymore by areyousureaboutthatblog
#WhyIStayed tweets, we can't allow the church to hide it's abuses anymore, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog 
on Flickr.

I hope in the end - this helps all of us avoid the #whyIstayed scenario. Because they've been taught to take Responsibility if their actions and words.

Make mistakes. Breathe, reflect, and Laugh.Out.Loud!!!

Friday, September 5, 2014

My Daughter was Inspired by a Beading Game...so we made One at Home

We found an easy toddler inspiration at my young sons preschool. While waiting to pick up younger son, we helped ourselves to the game shelf in his classroom (which his teacher said was okay for us). The teacher had great ideas, including this one. Simple pipe cleaner, and a bag of beads. We replicated this activity at home.

My Daughter finds a Beading Game Inspiration

The simplicity of it is genius, and I am amazed that months later this beading fun is STILL exciting at our home. I created a bin, similar to the teachers, and baby girl has access. She lets me know when she warns to play (and while I'm reasonably not afraid shell eat the beads, I make sure I'm with her when we do this activity), and we start. My older and younger son even love this game and they play often. And the boys have added, on their own, patterning ideas, counting, and other ways to change up the beading. 

My Daughter finds a Beading Game Inspiration


You can see the teacher had number labes on the pieces of pipe cleaner as a counting game.

So fun, so easy. Made with supplies and Tupperware we had on hand at home.

Just paying attention to what my little toddler wanted, and her interests, inspired all of us, including her two older brothers. Kids CAN teach us about what they like to play, learn about, an where their ability levels are.

Make mistakes. Breathe, reflect and Laugh.Out.Loud




When Inspiration Strikes during a Trivia Game.... Learning can be so fun!


Such a simple learning experience, and mom just had to connect the dots. 

We were playing a trivia card game and the question came up about the Taj Mahal. My Older son had learned about the Taj Mahal at school. I told him that his grand mother had visited there and he should ask to see the photos when he visits her. Then...
I remembered we had famous landmark cards near the kitchen table. And of course there was a photo if the Taj Mahal.

When Inspiration Strikes during a Trivia Game

Why is this sort of connecting the dots important? The brain forms new synapsis when ever we make connections. Even loose connections. I'll certainly post again on this when we start holding our "in depth studies" at home to continue our learning process ... But for today, we shared everything my older son knew about the Beautiful Taj Mahal, including HIS summer suggestion for us to go there. And we also know that the best way to retain what he learned is by "teaching others." it was a great moment for me to live this experience, and see my sons pride while sharing.

Make mistakes. Breathe, reflect, and Laugh.Out.Loud

Handmade Card for Baby Shower

Some PINspiration started my idea for a "baby's starter library" for a baby shower gift. Yes my inexpensive finds of some basic baby books were the foundation of the gift.

So few gifts include a handmade card or element. And I don't think it's lack of talent, simply a lack of time.

My two PINSpiration photos (top and bottom left side) are included. I liked the idea of the word BABY in a fancy script and a garden theme for the "starter library." My first sketch is included - I guess mated spacing and my colors and flower shapes. Here is experimented with color pencils in sons school supplies.

Handmade Card for Baby Shower by areyousureaboutthatblog
Handmade Card for Baby Shower, a photo by areyousureaboutthatblog on Flickr.

Total time commitment was about two hours. 30 minutes to find the PINspiration, 30 minutes for my sketch and the final piece took one hour to sketch and assemble with the toile cover glue on and then tied to the books with a pretty ribbon.

The books were added to our pack which included the splurge gift, a pack if diapers.

Happy photo finding. Photo 4 of 5 Final Sketch for cover of the books when wrapped.

UPDATE March 2015

I'll be making 2 more of these gifts for babies we are Welcoming into the World.
My only change to this project is making this "Babies First Library" instead of starter.

The lesser of two evils: Tap Water

Ah tap water. Free flowing into homes around the U. S. and mostly drinkable. Our tap water in Chicago is chemically treated to be drinkable, with he michaels like chlorine, fluoride and other additives to be considered Drinkable and mostly "safe."

Theres been taste tests on water where people taste 3-4 samples of water, including tap, and they have to tell which tastes better or "find the tap water." Usually tap water can be guessed easily. It has an awkward smell and a taste. When water shouldn't have a taste, right?

So what's so great about tap water. Because it flows from the tap, and while there's an aftertaste, it is drinkable. Or easily filtered to eliminate most of those additives.

Tap water is the lesser of two evils, with the great evil being "oral fecal." Not familiar with that term. Most water around the world IS NOT drinkable from the tap. Most of the worlds water is infected with water illnesses including diarrhea, hepatitis, dysentery, and tyfoid. The author acknowledged that nearly everyone in his family has hepatitis due to the water born problem in their country.

I too, a born and raised American, am relearning All. The. Time. why this is "such a great country." why it's a privilege to live here. Can you even imagine getting cramps, diarrhea, and life threatening disease from water? The water appar ently, as discussed to my horror in the interview, is odorless aind mostly clear, however it has trace levels of feces capable of causing these water born illnesses.

Hamid's wife was diagnosed with hepatitis the day after their wedding. "And it was the second time she had had it," he said. "Virtually everybody in my family has had either hepatitis or typhoid or something of that sort. You know, water-borne illness is everywhere. It affects the poor, and it also affects the affluent in a place like Pakistan... 

And dont think your safe traveling to high end resorts and hotels, water is precious, and scams are one way that you can also get sick,

Jamie shared further "So people are selling water, and both at the luxury level, where you have these high-end mineral waters and also at the level of just poor people needing something to drink. So his scam (the books character, taken from real life scenarios) is to take mineral water bottles that have been consumed at high-end restaurants, buy the empties, take tap water, boil it a little bit, pour it into these mineral water bottles and reseal it so it looks like it's an authentic water bottle and sell it back to the exact same restaurants, who probably suspect that it's a scam product, but because it's so much cheaper than the water they buy normally are happy to take it on."

This fabulous interview came from NPR on Fresh Air.

Mohsin Hamid, the author of How to Get Filthy Rich In Rising Asia. The business that Hamid’s main character in the novel finally makes his money in is … water. Bottled water, however, in this case. A sneak peak at what Hamid has to say on the subject of water.

I highly recommend (unsolicited, un-paid endorsement) this podcast, so you can hear about something I'm certain you haven't even fathomed before.

So, the next time I'm in a fancy schmancy restaurant, and the waiter asks "Bottled Water, or regular?" I'll go regular, good 'ol Tap! Because we can.

Water-born illness is everywhere. It affects the poor and it also affects the affluent in a place like affluent in a place like Pakistan. … Basically you get it either from drinking water, brushing your teeth with tap water or perhaps somebody prepared your food and they had washed their hands in that water or touched the water or handed washed their hands at all. The mode of transmission is what’s called oral-fecal and that sort of unsavory term really sums up how you get it.

How to get filthy rich in rising Asiahttp://www.npr.org/2013/03/13/174021020/a-young-man-gets-filthy-rich-boiling-bottling-tap-water


Make mistake. Breathe, reflect. And Laugh.Out.Loud ... Enjoy that glass of water too.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Unsolicited Hitch Hikers, Ticks (a chart)


We love spending family outings in Indiana and Wisconsin. And with our joy of hiking and bug collecting comes the unsolicited hitchhiker, the tick.

Thru reviewing tickencounter.org we've learned that only adult ticks carry Lyme disease. The larva stages do not. So knowing your tick sizes is imperative to understanding possible infection.

Unsolicited Hitch Hikers, Ticks (a chart) by areyousureaboutthatblog


Even tho we cover ourselves well, and use bug spray designed to help prevent ticks, we always check ourselves (in a strip search method) when returning from walks. Checking hairlines, in between our finger folds, and shake out our hair.

Make mistakes. Breathe, reflect, and Laugh.Out.Loud.

School Started and More Insect Labels

Of course we love insect collecting! It's fun family time, it's interesting, and extremely exciting we we find a new unknown (to us) specimen.

However, now with my computer on the fritz, pending a new windows installation and file backup... I'm stuck handwriting labels. We have had some tremendous finds this year, most recently finding over 100 Lady Bugs at Loyola Beach.

School Started and More Insect Labels


We were at the beach in the afternoon, the boys played football and built sand castles while baby girl and I collected the Lady's who wandered over to the shoreline. I have approximately 50 or so, which includes a few bees. Then we headed home at 4:00 p.m.

Later that day I realized I left our bags at the parking lot near the beach :-(. 2 hours later we drove back after rush hour. The bags were there!! And of course, baby girl, who came along for the ride wanted to stay at the beach. So we did. Why drive back immediately?