B-real's dress shirts come from Costco!
They are only $17.88 and there is a huge selection of different prints and sizes. The shirts are also no-iron and they have a great return policy!
Did I tell you about the roll-aboard suitcase B-real has that traveled some 150,000 miles on an airplane and got a squeaky wheel? It came from Costco and was a few years old. B-real returned it and they gave him a brand new suitcase, no questions asked.
The generous return policy makes Costco a business we like to patronize! In fact we chose to buy our patio table from Costco versus another retailer because we knew they would take it back if it did not hold up. Costco stands behind the products they sell!
Friday, August 16, 2013
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Math Mats
How cool is this?
Math Mat
I think it could work especially well for boys who have a hard time sitting still in school.
Speaking of math, I have seen math taught in some pretty creative ways. Addition and subtraction can be taught with chalk on the driveway. Think hopscotch (2 hops plus 2 hops equals how many hops?). Another physical way to teach counting by five and tens is to get kids up and have them do jumping jacks while they count 5, 10, 15, 20.
I like when teachers think outside the box and recognize that most kids minds work best when their little bodies are moving!
Big C's old school had two recesses per day for the younger grades and I thought they were spot on with that decision. One was between their math and reading periods and the other was at a more traditional lunch time!
Math Mat
I think it could work especially well for boys who have a hard time sitting still in school.
Speaking of math, I have seen math taught in some pretty creative ways. Addition and subtraction can be taught with chalk on the driveway. Think hopscotch (2 hops plus 2 hops equals how many hops?). Another physical way to teach counting by five and tens is to get kids up and have them do jumping jacks while they count 5, 10, 15, 20.
I like when teachers think outside the box and recognize that most kids minds work best when their little bodies are moving!
Big C's old school had two recesses per day for the younger grades and I thought they were spot on with that decision. One was between their math and reading periods and the other was at a more traditional lunch time!
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
What Kids Need to Be Happy
This is a re-post from an article my dad sent me. The things kids need to be happy are so simple!
Read on...
Happy Children
Read on...
Happy Children
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Need your eyes checked?
I stumbled upon The Eye Doctors at Walmart in Eden Prairie and won't go anywhere else to have my eyes or the girls eyes examined. I know it's Walmart and many of you might not like Wal-mart. The eye practice is independently owned by Dr. Viker. The store where the frames are sold is Wal-mart but you can take your prescription to another eyeglasses store, if you so choose.
Five Things I Like About the Eye Doctors:
1. The price! It's less than $80 to have your eyes examined.
2. Dr. Viker is good! She worked for years alongside a M.D. and has experience with a variety of eye problems. Furthermore, she is not afraid to refer you a specialist if she feels it is beyond her ability. I witnessed her doing that just yesterday.
3. Time! Dr. Viker takes time with her patients. She is so good with the girls, really engages them and sincerely seems to care about them, remembering them and their interests. While little c had her examine, she taught the girls about astigmatism, near sightedness and far sightedness, and how you become an optometrist. She's not in a rush to get done with you.
4. Right! She does things right. When I ordered my contacts most recently deposits quickly adhered to my lenses. Dr. Viker reordered them twice for me, thinking it was just a bad batch and eventually went with a different manufacturer.
5. Kind! Yesterday I witnessed Dr. Viker giving one of her patients her cell phone number because she was not going to be working the following day. She told her patient she'd just be out and about doing errands and not to hesitate to call her on her vacation day.
Dr. Viker is a little secret. Maybe I should have put her under my Sarah Saves heading! Normally finding something affordable means I have to compromise on quality. This is definitely not the case when seeing Dr. Viker, she's a steal!
Go visit her; you won't be disappointed!!
Five Things I Like About the Eye Doctors:
1. The price! It's less than $80 to have your eyes examined.
2. Dr. Viker is good! She worked for years alongside a M.D. and has experience with a variety of eye problems. Furthermore, she is not afraid to refer you a specialist if she feels it is beyond her ability. I witnessed her doing that just yesterday.
3. Time! Dr. Viker takes time with her patients. She is so good with the girls, really engages them and sincerely seems to care about them, remembering them and their interests. While little c had her examine, she taught the girls about astigmatism, near sightedness and far sightedness, and how you become an optometrist. She's not in a rush to get done with you.
4. Right! She does things right. When I ordered my contacts most recently deposits quickly adhered to my lenses. Dr. Viker reordered them twice for me, thinking it was just a bad batch and eventually went with a different manufacturer.
5. Kind! Yesterday I witnessed Dr. Viker giving one of her patients her cell phone number because she was not going to be working the following day. She told her patient she'd just be out and about doing errands and not to hesitate to call her on her vacation day.
Dr. Viker is a little secret. Maybe I should have put her under my Sarah Saves heading! Normally finding something affordable means I have to compromise on quality. This is definitely not the case when seeing Dr. Viker, she's a steal!
Go visit her; you won't be disappointed!!
Teaching Reading
Neither of our girls learned how to read the traditional way, the way we all probably learned, through phonics. At first I thought it was an anomaly and that Big C was just very smart and didn't learn the 'regular' way. It was interesting to see little c have the same experience. I've never taught the girls phonics, they just started reading, and have progressed without any instruction.
There are two main ways to teach a child how to read. Phonics is the most common way children learn to read at school. The problem I have with phonics is all of the exceptions to the rules. The second way children are taught to read is through sight word identification, the Dolch method. There is a list of 220 service words and 95 common nouns that compromise 50-75% of all words in children's books. The thought is if children learn these words they will be able to read most children's books. Many of the Dolch words cannot be sounded out and must be set to memory. Often times Dolch words are taught through the use of flashcards.
Here are my suggestions for teaching a child how to read:
1. Read often and at an early age to your children. When you read, point to the words as they are coming out of your mouth. Your child will begin to identify the words coming out of your mouth with a particular word. If your child is learning to read Easy Readers, read the book out loud to your child first, slowly and while pointing to the words, and then have him/her read the book independently.
2. Use your library. Check out the c.d./book packets at your library. Your child can sit and listen to the book on the c.d. as they follow the words in the book. The c.d. will beep when the child needs to turn the page. If you have a child who will not sit still to listen to a c.d. and follow along with a book, use this technique when they are in the car.
3. Introduce Bob books. Check out the Bob book series from your library and begin using the series at a young age, again pointing to the words as you read the simple book. I would suggest starting this around age 4.
4. Starfall. Utilize technology, like www.starfall.com to help your children learn to read. Starfall does essentially what I am recommending but on the computer. It will read a story to your child while highlighting the words in the passage as they are read. Again, your child will begin to see a word and remember what the word sounds like when being said.
5. Relax. Make sure reading is a fun, non-stressful activity for your child. They will learn to read! Maybe not on the schedule you would like but it will happen. Most importantly you want them to grow up with a love for reading. Model reading at home so your children realize it's something to be enjoyed, not an agonizing, unpleasant task!
There are two main ways to teach a child how to read. Phonics is the most common way children learn to read at school. The problem I have with phonics is all of the exceptions to the rules. The second way children are taught to read is through sight word identification, the Dolch method. There is a list of 220 service words and 95 common nouns that compromise 50-75% of all words in children's books. The thought is if children learn these words they will be able to read most children's books. Many of the Dolch words cannot be sounded out and must be set to memory. Often times Dolch words are taught through the use of flashcards.
Here are my suggestions for teaching a child how to read:
1. Read often and at an early age to your children. When you read, point to the words as they are coming out of your mouth. Your child will begin to identify the words coming out of your mouth with a particular word. If your child is learning to read Easy Readers, read the book out loud to your child first, slowly and while pointing to the words, and then have him/her read the book independently.
2. Use your library. Check out the c.d./book packets at your library. Your child can sit and listen to the book on the c.d. as they follow the words in the book. The c.d. will beep when the child needs to turn the page. If you have a child who will not sit still to listen to a c.d. and follow along with a book, use this technique when they are in the car.
3. Introduce Bob books. Check out the Bob book series from your library and begin using the series at a young age, again pointing to the words as you read the simple book. I would suggest starting this around age 4.
4. Starfall. Utilize technology, like www.starfall.com to help your children learn to read. Starfall does essentially what I am recommending but on the computer. It will read a story to your child while highlighting the words in the passage as they are read. Again, your child will begin to see a word and remember what the word sounds like when being said.
5. Relax. Make sure reading is a fun, non-stressful activity for your child. They will learn to read! Maybe not on the schedule you would like but it will happen. Most importantly you want them to grow up with a love for reading. Model reading at home so your children realize it's something to be enjoyed, not an agonizing, unpleasant task!
Saturday, August 10, 2013
One on One Time
It's pretty special when we manage to get some one-on-one time with each of the girls. I was lucky enough to have some of that time in mid-July when little c and I went to Girl Scout camp with her Daisy troop. Four moms and daughters went together and it was the start of an awesome tradition. We had SO much fun together!
Thankfully we were not tent camping but had a air conditioned bunk house for accommodations. The bunks may have been the best part, in the eyes of the girls! Often times they would suggest we head back to the bunk house rather than participate in the camp type activities. It was little c's first time on the top bunk.
We hiked, groomed horses, swam, did archery and went Geo-caching. The girls participated in a skit and we made s'mores.
I am thankful for such a nice group of friends for little c and equally nice mom friends for me!
Thankfully we were not tent camping but had a air conditioned bunk house for accommodations. The bunks may have been the best part, in the eyes of the girls! Often times they would suggest we head back to the bunk house rather than participate in the camp type activities. It was little c's first time on the top bunk.
We hiked, groomed horses, swam, did archery and went Geo-caching. The girls participated in a skit and we made s'mores.
I am thankful for such a nice group of friends for little c and equally nice mom friends for me!
Bene-Babe
I'm a Bene-Babe.
One of the employees at Sephora told me Bene-Babe is the name given to someone who loves Benefit makeup.
If I were stranded on a desert island and could only bring one make-up item, I wouldn't think for a second, before grabbing my Benefit Erase Paste. It's an under-eye concealer that not only hides dark circles but brightens up the area underneath my eyes.
I also wear their Hello Flawless: Oxygen Wow Foundation. Oh, and Girl Meets Pearl which gives me a dewy, healthy look.
See, I really am a Bene-Babe! Now, if anyone has a suggestion for a good blush, send it my way!
One of the employees at Sephora told me Bene-Babe is the name given to someone who loves Benefit makeup.
If I were stranded on a desert island and could only bring one make-up item, I wouldn't think for a second, before grabbing my Benefit Erase Paste. It's an under-eye concealer that not only hides dark circles but brightens up the area underneath my eyes.
I also wear their Hello Flawless: Oxygen Wow Foundation. Oh, and Girl Meets Pearl which gives me a dewy, healthy look.
See, I really am a Bene-Babe! Now, if anyone has a suggestion for a good blush, send it my way!
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