Handipoints is free service where kids earn points by doing chores, worksheets, & arts and crafts! Kids save their points to adopt a pet cat & play dress-up games.

October 26, 2009

Overheard

Filed under: Children, Chores, Teen years — Chris @ 8:57 am

My oldest son, a teenager, was telling me that he really needs a raise in his allowance.

But, you haven’t even been doing any chores at all to earn the allowance you are already getting, I said.

Well, I think going to school and playing football count as my chores.

Hahaha.  No, they do not.

But it got me thinking about how chores have changed for my children as they have gotten older.  They simply do not have as much free time to do nightly chores.  Chores for them have evolved into weekend tasks that I ask them to do on an as needed basis.  It is ironic that now that they are at an age to actually be helpful they have no time to do any of the chores!

Ah, parenting.  Just when you think you have things figured out, it changes on you.

September 13, 2009

Grandparents Day

Filed under: Children — Chris @ 5:28 pm

Today is Grandparent’s Day.  Are your children lucky enough to have their grandparents living nearby? 

Many people will celebrate today with a card, a phone call, or if they are lucky a visit.   We don’t live near our grandparents, but we do have an elderly neighbor.  So we will bring her over some banana bread that we baked.  I don’t know her well enough to know if she has family coming to visit her today, or even if she has grandchildren, but certainly an act of kindness from children is always a welcome gift.

Other than that my kids will call their grandparents and say hello and we will spend the rest of Sunday the way we always do.

What are your plans for Grandparent’s Day?

September 12, 2009

Life in a Neighborhood

Filed under: Children, parenting — Chris @ 2:06 pm

We  movedthis  past year from a rather rural environment to a suburban neighborhood. You can’t throw a stick without hitting a kid, a dog or an SUV for that matter. Thus far, it has been a really idyllic environment.   The children have made some really great friends, the other parents are all friendly, the schools are great.

There was one family that I heard about through the grapevine, but my interactions with them had been mostly fine. If you count the 11yr old coming into our house when we were not home and taking ice cream out of my freezer fine.  I gave the kid the benefit of the doubt and assumed it was just a kid making bad choice and after we discussed it, I put it out of my mind.

Yesterday there was a huge blow out between this family and mine. I have been thinking about it all day and wondering what the lesson is that I want to learn from it, oither than to stay away from this family.

It is my sincere hope that if my children ever do something wrong, really truly wrong, that I will believe the evidence. I hope that I will never lash out and attack the messenger. I also hope that I wouldn’t defend my child just for the sake of defending them, when all of the evidence shows that they are lying. 

All kids are going to misbehave sometimes, that is a given.  The way we as parents chose to react over it is the key to raising good kids.   Over and over again this past weekend I have heard other  people say, “Well, those children are a direct reflection of their parents.”  And I thought, how true.  And also?  How sad.

I still feel sort of sick over the whole thing. I feel sad that my children had to learn that not everyone who claims to be your friend really is. My 10 yr old was especially devastated that someone he thought was a good friend would steal from him, lie repeatedly about it, and then try to turn the entire situation around with more lies to try and get other people into trouble.  

I am also upset because I have an active imagination and imagine what these kids will be like in a few years when they are older and have the ability to get into REAL trouble or get others into REAL trouble with their lies.  Of course, there is also a part of me that feels sad for the kids.

This parenting thing, just when you think you know what you are doing something flies out at you from left field.

September 9, 2009

Making Homework Time Easier

Filed under: Children, Ideas, parenting, schedules — Chris @ 3:17 pm

Navigating the afternoon of homework and enrichment activities has proven to be a challenge here at my house. Now that we are several weeks in I have discovered some things that are working for me and helping to make this time of day less stressful. I hope you will share your ideas as well.

1) Set time to do homework.

At first I was allowing them to come home and immediately go outside and play with their friends. Mostly because I felt bad for them having been cooped up at school all day. Then I realized that it was impossible to get them back into the house to do their homework later on.

So now, homework happens as soon as they arrive home from school.

2) Have a snack ready

I have a snack sitting out at that table ready for them to eat as soon as they walk in the door. They sit down and eat and it gives me the opportunity to go through their backpacks and check if there is anything that I need to do.

3)Eliminate distractions

No television or video games are allowed on school nights. Period. End of discussion. This is why God invented the dvr.

4) Have all the supplies ready

I have containers of pencils, markers, colored pencils, scissors and glue sticks at the table. Various kinds of paper are nearby. Any sort of assigment they need to complete, we have the supplies ready.

5) Be present and interested

I can remember as a child going to friends house and having her parents ask about assignments that we were doing and being interested in the subjects we were studying for. This was very unlike my family where homework was considered my job. No one ever asked about it and certainly no one was ever interested in what I was studying in school.

What other sort of ideas do you have to make homework time go more smoothly at your house? How do you motivate the reluctant student?

August 20, 2009

Makes Me Think

Filed under: Children, Humor Keeps Me Sane, Keeping It Real — Chris @ 6:56 am

I have laryngitis.  Horribly, awful, laryngitis.  The sort where even whispering is difficult. This has led to a couple of hilarious things happening around my house.

First, I have noticed that since I can’t talk above a whisper, everyone gets really close to talk to me and they whisper right back.  They are way more attentive to what I am saying.  It makes me think I should just incorporate talking softly into my life.  Though who am I kidding, I am a loud mouth at heart.

Second, because I sound horrible my kids think that I must feel really, really sick.  So they keep saying things to each other like, “Don’t make Mom talk, can’t you see how sick she is!” And they have volunteered themselves to do all sorts of things around the house for me.  It makes me think that all the talks of being kind, helpful, and teaching them how to do chores has paid off.  Even thought there have been times over the years that I have been tempted to throw in the proverbial towel and allow them all to go feral.

Third, somewhat related.  One of my young sons asked me if I was sick because I “have puberty.”  Not sure where he heard the word but it was hysterical.  I told him I was fairly certain I was long over puberty.  Of course this led to more questions about what puberty is.  And I got to whisper all about it while they sat right in my face.  And whispered back.  In the end we all concluded that their teenage brothers are the ones who are “sick with puberty.”

July 30, 2009

Back to School Supplies

Filed under: Children — Chris @ 11:26 pm

This year will mark our first foray into the public school system.  Already things are surprising  me.  Things that make me say, “Hey, back in my day we didn’t do that!”  My day being obviously when dinosaurs roamed the Earth.

The latest thing to surprise me, after the no backpack rule, is the supply list that each child has to fulfill.  Wow, really?  When did this all happen?  And when did it become so extensive?  Ziploc bags, kleenex, scissors… Do the scissors wear out from year to year?  Also I found it odd that the stuff is communal

I picked up the lists today at the Office Supply store and truly was shocked at how much money this is all going to cost per child.  I know I am not the only frugal person out here, so tell me where do you buy your children’s mandated back to school supplies?   Is it less expensive to follow the sales around?  Or does it end up costing more in gas and aggravation?  Help a Mom out here, please.

July 27, 2009

Man on the Moon

Filed under: Children, On The Web — Chris @ 10:23 am

Did you know that July 20th was the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the moon?

I have one child who loves space, stars, planets, and all things related, however tangentially, to them.  And so we have looked through many sites on the Internet, watched the actual footage from the landing, and watched the movie Apollo 13 and The Right Stuff.

NASA has a web page dedicated to the 40th anniversary of the Apollo landing on the moon.

NPR story to listen to, only 3 minutes long so good for those shorter attention spans

National Geographic has a quiz to test your knowledge of the Apollo 11 mission.

National Geographic also has the original article that ran in their magazine in December 1969, which I find fascinating.  It easy easy to forget with all of the advanced technology that we have nowadays what a big deal this truly was.  And how exciting it was for the entire world.

July 20, 2009

Five Chore Ideas for the Under Five Year Old

Filed under: Ages 2-4 years, Chores, Ideas, parenting — Chris @ 8:28 am

Oh this is the age when they want to help you.  More  than anything they want to be your sidekick, to be useful and helpful.  The reality is that once they are truly capable at doing the chore they want to do, they will no longer have any desire to do it.  At this age you are just instilling in your child a habit of helping.  The reality is that nothing they can do cannot be done by you more efficiently.  So keep that in mind when they are doing their “chores.”

1) Help with the laundry. 

Preschoolers are great at sorting clothes by color, stuffing clothes into the washing machine, pushing the button to turn the machine on.  My 4yr old son will knock down anyone in his way to reach the washing machine and be the one to push the on button.

He also likes to help with the clothes after they come out of the wash.  I will let him put the clothing into pilesbased on who it belongs to.  He likes to match socks.  He can carry towels to the linen closet and dishrags to the kitchen.

2) Unload the dishwasher. 

 I will remove the knives from the silverware basket and let him put the silverware away in the drawer.  He loves doing this job.  Depending on his mood it will take him 5 seconds or the entire afternoon.  Not surprisingly the amount of time he spends directly correlates to how well organized our silverware is.

3) Washing dishes in the sink. 

Pots, pans, and plastics are no match for my 4 yr old and his soapy sponge.  This chore isn’t so much about cleaning anything as it is about keeping him busy.  I am hoping that maybe when he gets to be the age of his teenage brothers he will remember the miracle of running water in the sink that one can– GASP– wash their own dishes in.

4) Setting the table. 

It is never to early to start teaching them how to properly set a table.  My son will put the placemats and silverware in each spot.  He can also carry the plates one by one to the table and put them down.

5) Meal preparation. 

Children who help prepare meals are much more likely to eat them.  My son loves to help make salad. I swear that the salad spinner was the single best purchase I have ever made for the kitchen, in terms of being used my the kids.  My lettuce has never been more clean.

And the most important thing… never let them see you redo their work.  You want them to feel confident and proud.

July 18, 2009

Long Hot Summer Days?

Filed under: Children, Ideas, Just For Fun — Chris @ 9:12 am

Here is a fun idea to do with your children, ages 2-102. Though I assume none of you probably have children that are 102 years old.   First, it is a project that all of them will do happily.  Second, it will keep every last one of them busy for a good while.  Third, it is a snack.  What’s not to love about it?

Homemade Ice Cream in a Bag

1 tablespoon sugar
1/2 cup half & half
1/4 teaspoon vanilla

6 tablespoons rock salt
1 pint-size ziploc bag
1 gallon-size ziploc bag
Ice cubes

Step One: Put the first three ingredients into the pint sized ziploc bag. Seal well. Check and make sure that is is sealed well. Check again.

Step Two: Put the pint sized ziploc bag inside of the gallon sized ziploc bag.

Step Three: Fill the gallon sized ziploc bag with ice and rock salt. (This is why you really want to make sure the smaller ziploc bag is completely sealed. Salt leaking into your ice cream…ewwwwww.)

Step Four: Shake your bags.

After about 5-10 minutes the half & half will thicken and you will have ice cream!

Take the small bag of ice cream out of the larger bag — you may want to wipe the bag off to get rid of the salt residue, especially for younger children who are not as neat. Then, grab a spoon and eat it right out of the bag.

Enjoy!

You can also add other ingredients to your bag such as chocolate syrup, sprinkles, mini-chocolate chips, crushed oreos… well, you get the idea.

July 16, 2009

Being a Quitter

Filed under: Children, parenting — Chris @ 9:15 am

We have all heard the old adage, “Winners never quit, Quitters never win.”

But does this apply to our kids and their activities?  What is the point where we will allow them to quit something that they signed up for that maybe is not going the way that they imagined it.  Do you make your children push through and continue the activity?  Or do you allow them to quit?

I had one friend, a long time ago– I have been at this parenting things for awhile, who let her children quit activities all the time.  In fact, it was more than norm than the anomaly.  There were countless times that we signed our children up for activities together and say that we were going to carpool only to have them drop out a couple weeks later.  It was annoying to all involved. 

On the other hand I also have known people who forced their children to do an activity that weren’t happy with for YEARS before finally allowing them to quit.  Surely there has to be a balance somewhere between these two extremes.  However, finding that balance can be tricky.

For the most part our family rule has been that if you make a commitment you follow it through.  Though most of our commitments are short lived.  So a 6 week long science course at the nature center that I paid good money for?  You will go to all six weeks and make the best of it. Even if it has turned out to be boring.  You wanted to play a sport?  Well you have made a commitment to the team and you will remain on the team and go to practice and games, with a good attitude, until the season is over.   Decide that you want to take piano lessons but after a few months change your mind?  Well, after setting a specific time period for re-evaluation, you may quit. 

I think I have achieved a balance that I am happy with between letting the children have a say in their activities and teaching them what it mean to commit to something and follow through, even if they are not thrilled with it.  My children might not always be happy about it.

So, what do you think?  Are there specific rules in your family regarding activities?  Will you allow your child to stop an activity mid session if they are not happy with it?

Older Posts »

© 2007 - 2009, Handipoints Inc. - A Good Cat is a Cool Cat