All Discussions Tagged 'childhood' - Classroom 2.02024-03-29T01:56:19Zhttps://www.classroom20.com/forum/topic/listForTag?tag=childhood&feed=yes&xn_auth=noParental anxietytag:www.classroom20.com,2013-07-03:649749:Topic:9424542013-07-03T23:36:40.335ZAlison Willishttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/AlisonWillis
<p>So often teachers have to deal with parental anxiety, and this somehow complicates learning experiences for children.</p>
<p>Here's a great resource for helping parents understand how learning really happens.</p>
<p><a href="http://bookstore.balboapress.com/Products/SKU-000648638/Nurturing-Intelligence.aspx" target="_blank">Nurturing Intelligence (2013)</a></p>
<p>So often teachers have to deal with parental anxiety, and this somehow complicates learning experiences for children.</p>
<p>Here's a great resource for helping parents understand how learning really happens.</p>
<p><a href="http://bookstore.balboapress.com/Products/SKU-000648638/Nurturing-Intelligence.aspx" target="_blank">Nurturing Intelligence (2013)</a></p> Community Connections Projecttag:www.classroom20.com,2011-08-14:649749:Topic:7107832011-08-14T14:46:08.954ZKristen Painohttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/KristenPaino
<p>I am looking for K-3 classrooms from around the world to join my Community Connections Project! </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Teachers are always looking for ways to expose their students to other children, communities and cultures from around the world. Many schools have a similar social studies curriculum in grades K-3 where they learn about urban, suburban, and rural communities. I developed a collaborative wiki as a place where teachers and students can share information (including images, audio and…</p>
<p>I am looking for K-3 classrooms from around the world to join my Community Connections Project! </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Teachers are always looking for ways to expose their students to other children, communities and cultures from around the world. Many schools have a similar social studies curriculum in grades K-3 where they learn about urban, suburban, and rural communities. I developed a collaborative wiki as a place where teachers and students can share information (including images, audio and video) about their communities, and in the process, learn about other communities. The more people we get to join, the more communities our students get to learn about!</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Please visit my <a target="_blank" href="http://mspaino.edu.glogster.com/community-connections-project/">Community Connections Project Site</a> for more information! </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Come join! It will be a fun and valuable learning experience for your students! </p> Why children Need to Eat Fruits & Veggies?tag:www.classroom20.com,2009-04-07:649749:Topic:3225062009-04-07T05:23:13.094ZJohn Khanhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/JohnKhan
Eating fruits and vegetables is part of a healthy diet for both children and adults. Finding creative ways to encourage fruits and vegetables in your child’s diet can be fun for the entire family.<br />
<br />
Getting kids to eat well, and especially eat fruits and vegetables is a challenge for many parents. To help prevent your child from becoming a picky eater.<br />
<br />
It can help to start early, offering your toddler lots of different types of foods and letting them see you eat and enjoy a variety of foods,…
Eating fruits and vegetables is part of a healthy diet for both children and adults. Finding creative ways to encourage fruits and vegetables in your child’s diet can be fun for the entire family.<br />
<br />
Getting kids to eat well, and especially eat fruits and vegetables is a challenge for many parents. To help prevent your child from becoming a picky eater.<br />
<br />
It can help to start early, offering your toddler lots of different types of foods and letting them see you eat and enjoy a variety of foods, especially fruits and vegetables. Although infants often get a lot of fruit and vegetable baby foods, once they start eating table food, what you eat is going to be a big influence on what your kids like to eat. If you rarely serve vegetables with meals or eat fruit, don't be surprised if your kids develop the same tastes.<br />
<br />
Know details please visit: <b>http://www.edact.com/why-do-i-need-to-eat-fruits-veggies-1-book-1-read-along-cd-complementary-song.html</b> 3 simple steps to help your kids become smarter.tag:www.classroom20.com,2009-03-25:649749:Topic:3145642009-03-25T09:41:42.991ZJohn Khanhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/JohnKhan
Nobody wants to think that their child is not smart, but the truth is fewer kids are engaging in the kinds of activities that make them smarter.<br />
<br />
<b>Here are his 3 simple tips for helping make your kids smarter:</b><br />
<br />
1. Don't be afraid to expose your kids to more complex stories, even if you have to read them to your children. According to me that we can help stem that tide by offering children more complex books for early childhood reading.<br />
<br />
we improved prepare them for the more intricate…
Nobody wants to think that their child is not smart, but the truth is fewer kids are engaging in the kinds of activities that make them smarter.<br />
<br />
<b>Here are his 3 simple tips for helping make your kids smarter:</b><br />
<br />
1. Don't be afraid to expose your kids to more complex stories, even if you have to read them to your children. According to me that we can help stem that tide by offering children more complex books for early childhood reading.<br />
<br />
we improved prepare them for the more intricate stories they'll encounter in their secondary school career By engaging younger children with more complex stories and concepts.<br />
<br />
2. Use stories that kids like and relate them to history, literature, etc. -- other things they need to learn in school.<br />
<br />
3. Don't dumb it down! You'd be surprised how much information kids can absorb if given the chance.<br />
"Young children are smarter than we give them credit for being,"<br />
It's been proven that parents help their children much more by using plain language with them than they do when they use baby talk, so why do we feel compelled to 'dumb down' what they read in younger years?<br />
<br />
It's time we identify what researchers and scientists have been proving in studies for decades - that young children can absorb information at a much faster rate than older children, and they can retain more of it.<br />
<b><br />
What is your opinion? or Any Suggestion that help kids to become smart</b> Forty-Five Percent of Kids Say They Don't Eat Veggies Daily, but Parents Are Game for Dangling Creative Carrots to Turn the Tables.tag:www.classroom20.com,2009-03-18:649749:Topic:3109542009-03-18T06:34:23.660ZJohn Khanhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/JohnKhan
After details researched in <b><a href="http://www.edact.com/about-us.html">kids activities</a></b> I found nearly half of kids still say they don't eat vegetables every day, but their days of hiding peas could be numbered but parents are digging in to find the root cause and declaring some victories, according to my survey one of parents and their children released today.<br />
The survey, from the makers of Hidden Valley Salad Dressings, looked at vegetable utilization among children and asked…
After details researched in <b><a href="http://www.edact.com/about-us.html">kids activities</a></b> I found nearly half of kids still say they don't eat vegetables every day, but their days of hiding peas could be numbered but parents are digging in to find the root cause and declaring some victories, according to my survey one of parents and their children released today.<br />
The survey, from the makers of Hidden Valley Salad Dressings, looked at vegetable utilization among children and asked parents to report from the front lines of the veggie battle. Of the children surveyed, 45 percent confessed to skipping veggies -- a number that didn't surprise parents. To get kids to reach for a carrot, words alone are not enough, the parents told researchers. In fact, parents who take an active role in teaching their children about vegetables and engaging their kids from the ground up showing them where and how vegetables grow, what nutrients they contain, and including kids in preparing vegetables in home-cooked meals -- report more success at influencing their children's eating habits.<br />
"Engaging children in the garden or even a virtual garden is a great way to plant seeds of knowledge and appreciation, especially because when kids are invested in the entire process, they're more likely to eat and request vegetables they grew themselves. Why homeschoolers feel that e-schooling is not homeschooling?tag:www.classroom20.com,2009-02-26:649749:Topic:2979932009-02-26T09:23:36.740ZJohn Khanhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/JohnKhan
Last night I was searching something about <a href="http://www.edact.com/blog/"><b>early childhood education</b></a>, <a href="http://www.edact.com/"><b>educational activities</b></a> and difference between homeschoolers & e-schooling. I have gone through few article and I got Mindy Brems article, maybe she has written good content. According to her E-schooling is actually a form of public school, with certified teachers for each online class that is done via the Internet in the home…
Last night I was searching something about <a href="http://www.edact.com/blog/"><b>early childhood education</b></a>, <a href="http://www.edact.com/"><b>educational activities</b></a> and difference between homeschoolers & e-schooling. I have gone through few article and I got Mindy Brems article, maybe she has written good content. According to her E-schooling is actually a form of public school, with certified teachers for each online class that is done via the Internet in the home setting.<br />
<br />
Mindy Brems of Coshocton chose to educate her three children - Emma, ninth-grade; Ellie, sixth-grade; and John, fifth-grade - through an e-school two years ago. She researched the various home school and e-school programs before deciding on the option they are currently using.<br />
"With the e-school program that we use, Ohio Connections Academy, we are following the state's curriculum which meets all the educational standards set by the State of Ohio," said Brems. "That also means that my kids take all the tests required by the state."<br />
<br />
Brems feels that the confusion between homeschooling and e-schooling comes from the fact that many e-schoolers tend to call themselves homeschoolers, but technically that isn't correct.<br />
"Many traditional homeschoolers feel that e-schooling is not homeschooling," said Brems. "And for the most part they are right. Homeschoolers fought for 30 years to have the right to educate their children at home without the state's interference. So it is different from e-schooling. E-schooling uses the state's public school curriculum."<br />
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<b>So I am asking you what is your suggestion on Mindy Brems's Article and major difference between homeschooling and e-schooling</b> Do you think music will help to develop child’s education?tag:www.classroom20.com,2009-02-18:649749:Topic:2940852009-02-18T10:02:03.645ZJohn Khanhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/JohnKhan
As I have discuss many of parents even also children related to music and most of saying <a href="http://www.edact.com/blog/?p=24">early childhood music development</a> is helping their children education. Whatever I have got this is off line but now i am asking online people or parents like you. What are your suggestions?
As I have discuss many of parents even also children related to music and most of saying <a href="http://www.edact.com/blog/?p=24">early childhood music development</a> is helping their children education. Whatever I have got this is off line but now i am asking online people or parents like you. What are your suggestions?