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Parents Should Limit Young Children’s Exposure to Background TV

Despite the fact that pediatricians recommend no screen media exposure for children under age 2, three-quarters of very young children in America live in homes where the television is on most of the time, according to research. A new study has found that leaving your TV set on disrupts young children while they are playing, even if the channel is tuned to adult shows. This means that simply having the TV on, even in the background, may be detrimental to children’s development.

The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Massachusetts, is published in the July/August 2008 issue of the journal Child Development.

The researchers looked at 50 children ages 1, 2, and 3. Each child came to a lab with a parent and was invited to play for an hour with a variety of age-appropriate toys. For half the time, a television was on in the room, showing an episode of the adult game show Jeopardy!, with commercials; during the other half hour, the TV was turned off.

Researchers observed the children as they played to determine whether background TV—defined as adult-oriented television that is on and may be watched by older members of the family, but which very young children don’t understand and to which they pay little attention—affected the children’s behavior during play.

Background TV was found to disrupt the toy play of the children at every age, even when they paid little attention to it. When the television was on, the children played for significantly shorter periods of time and the time they spent focused on their play was shorter, compared to when the TV was off.

“Background TV, as an ever-changing audiovisual distractor, disrupts children’s efforts to sustain attention to ongoing play behaviors,” according to Marie Evans Schmidt, who is now a research associate at the Center on Media and Child Health at Children’s Hospital Boston and is the lead author of the study. “Background TV is potentially a chronic environmental risk factor affecting most American children. Parents should limit their young children’s exposure to background television.”

Source: EurekAlert, DC
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2008-07/sfri-psl070808.php

15 July, 2008. 12:13 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Don’t Teach Boys to Be Like Girls

If you were an energetic nine-year-old boy who loved school, did your best but also loved charging about, trying to beat your friends at every game possible, imagine the hell of our currrent state school system where ball games are banned from the playground in case someone gets hurt, there is no outside play in bad weather and you are constantly in trouble for being too competitive because winning is not what it’s about. And, worse, Jamie Oliver fruit smoothies have replaced sponge pudding in your school dinner, so you’re starving by two o’clock.

Sue Palmer is a former head teacher, literacy adviser and the author of 21st Century Boys. She says it is a biological necessity that boys run about, take risks, swing off things and compete with each other to develop properly. “If they can’t, a lot of them find it impossible to sit still, focus on a book or wield a pencil,” she says, “so their behaviour is considered ‘difficult’, they get into trouble and tumble into a cycle of school failure.”

Boys are three times as likely as girls to need extra help with reading at primary school, and 75 per cent of children supposedly suffering from ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) are male. “We are losing boys at a rate of knots, particularly in literacy,” Palmer says, “because at some point in the past 30 years, masculinity became an embarrassment.”

Research by Simon Baron-Cohen, a respected Cambridge professor, that began as an investigation into autism, puts a solid case for biological male/female differences in the brain, with boys tending to be “systematisers” and girls “empathisers”. This explains why boys generally are less keen on reading and comprehension, and lag behind girls in literacy. A lot of boys find it easier to explain the workings of a watch than to discuss how a character in a story is feeling. “But now,” says Palmer, “apart from the very bright ones, boys aren’t even doing better at maths and science.”

Some people blame this nosedive, first noticed in the mid-Nineties, on the “feminisation” of education - too many women teachers, girl-friendly classroom environments and modular exam systems that suit girls’ study skills but disadvantage risk-takers. “Geniuses are much more likely to be male,” Palmer says, “but if you don’t tick the right boxes, you fail.”

There are seven times as many women primary school teachers as men, but Christine Skelton, Professor of Gender Equality in Education at Birmingham University, argues that there have always been far more female teachers than male. “Obviously there are some women who understand active boys, and some men who don’t, just as there are energetic girls and inactive boys,” she says.

The current generation of teachers, though, were born and raised in an atmosphere dominated by women’s liberation and “non-gender-specific” education that began in the Seventies. Barbies were banned, most protagonists in books were female and there was no tolerance of war or superhero play. As a head teacher, Palmer remembers making her reception teacher remove all the cloakroom pegs that depicted tractors for boys and bunnies for girls.

“The belief was that you were shaped by your environment, and it was the teacher’s responsibility to ‘socialise’ boys away from their natural inclinations and to encourage girls to study traditionally male subjects such as physics and technology,” she says.

Palmer would never deny that some of it was absolutely necessary - but with movements such as Reclaim the Night, Greenham Common and Gay Pride, groups that offered an alternative perspective to the traditionally dominant male view taking centre stage, masculinity became suspect. “I really think,” she says, “that the almighty cock-up of the sisterhood in the Seventies was that we believed we could turn boys into girls.”

Palmer says that most women are not natural risk-takers, so for teachers who have not helped to bring up brothers and who don’t have sons, boys’ behaviour can be frightening. “Play-fighting, for example, reaches a peak at age 7 or 8 but is not actually aggressive,” she says. “It’s social - it’s the way boys get to know each other and see how the other one ticks. A lot of women teachers are horrified when I suggest that they should let boys get on with fighting and shouting because eventually they’ll come out the other side and start negotiating.”

Another problem for boys seeking adventure is that, because we live in an increasingly risk-averse society, children are rarely allowed to play unsupervised. When did you last see a group of boys climbing a tree?

“There is a rational fear of increased traffic but also an irrational fear of stranger danger, fanned by media reporting of child abduction,” says Palmer. “Parents are worried about being considered irresponsible, so they never let their children out of their sight.” And because we are not used to seeing boys playing outside, when we do it feels hostile even when what is going on is not particularly boisterous.

Dan Travis, a sports coach, argues that it is very important for boys to muck about on their own. “Coaching is formal and necessary but should only take up 20 per cent of the time they play,” he says. “The informal 80 per cent is where most of the learning and practising occurs - away from adult supervision.”

Travis is running a campaign to bring competition back to school sport. “The Sport for All ethos took hold in the Seventies and never let go,” he says. “Games are only about inclusion, with no winners allowed.” This is disastrous for boys, who need to compete to establish their place in the hierarchy, which is how they organise their friendships and something that they understand from nursery age onwards. It is also bad for sport. Palmer adds that “self-esteem” arrived from America and now no child is allowed to “lose” at anything.

Palmer is not suggesting that boys should be allowed to behave in any way they want. What we need, she says, is to celebrate what makes them boys and help them to understand the things that don’t come naturally to them. That means getting them outside more, particularly as space gets squeezed in urban schools. “Not letting boys be boys is not only detrimental to them but also to girls, many of whom become overcompliant with what is considered ‘good’ behaviour and could do with a shove outdoors to take more risks,” she says. “I certainly wish that had happened to me.”

Palmer is especially enthusiastic about the few “outdoor nurseries” that we have in this country, and about the Scandinavian system that puts off formal learning until the age of 7 or 8, concentrating instead on playing outside and the development of social skills.

In the ideal Palmer world, everyone would go to a Scandinavian-style school. What we are doing instead is bringing in the Early Years Foundation Stage, a new government framework that becomes law in September. It says that by the age of 5 children should be writing sentences, some of which are punctuated. “That would be impressive for a seven-year-old,” says Palmer. “So rather than tackling the imbalance in the way that we have treated boys for too long, we are going to make them sit still and learn even younger. I’d call that little short of state-sponsored child abuse.”

21st Century Boys will be published by Orion in early 2009

Source: Times Online, UK
http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/families/article4288100.ece

8 July, 2008. 11:58 AM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Teachers, Parents, Students: Get Back to Basics

I can’t believe what I just read. We are going to spend millions for our teachers to teach our children how to be lazier.

The question was, “How do you solve the turkey problem if you are a third grader who doesn’t know how to multiply?”

If the kids are really supposed to stretch their math muscles, you teach them the multiplication tables in the second grade. Are our children as smart as we were? A teacher told me they are not. They sit in the classroom and will not listen, will not work, and will not try. This is not a learning problem, this is a parental problem.

Out with the rules, in with the real world. That’s the problem to begin with. We have become so lax in our parenting that we are developing generations of lazy, unproductive, overindulged children. Their parents grew up the same way. They only learn what is fun for them. They can tell you all the words to every song on their Ipod but they can’t remember 5 X 5 = 25. They can’t spell because they use text message lingo and everyone accepts that. Parents, teachers and society do not demand excellence from an early age, so the children don’t demand of themselves.

There are too many parents who think children will learn by osmosis. They are so self-absorbed with themselves and by life outside the home they don’t see or care what happens inside.

On the other hand, there are caring parents who teach their children self-control, the importance of learning and how to work for something they want. There are good teachers who have their hands tied when they try to teach excellence. Many are getting discouraged and changing their profession.

And there are children out there who put forth the effort to learn and apply it to a productive life. They are the ones I hope will become the teachers and leaders of tomorrow. The rest will be draining our welfare system forever.

There are some special-needs children who require special learning skills. They deserve all the help we can give them. However, we are raising generations of “special needs” children because parents are neglectful, society accepts mediocrity and school boards look for expensive ways and new fads to educate rather than teach the basics.

5 X 5 equaled 25 in 1930 and in 1960, and it still does in 2008. New Math didn’t work in the 60s and it will not work now. Stop wasting our tax dollars.

I cannot support the school board anymore until they start coming up with ideas that make sense. My vote will be “no,” until they get back to teaching basic principles and build from there.

Source: Idaho Press-Tribune, ID
http://www.idahopress.com/?id=11471

7 July, 2008. 10:00 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Workouts to Become Compulsory for Toddlers

Children as young as three will undergo compulsory exercise regimes of up to two hours every day in preschools.

The New South Wales Government’s anti-obesity program also phases out junkfood with kids now drinking watered down juices and low-fat milk and parents receiving a list of recommended foods for their children’s lunchboxes.

Star jumps, action-singing songs as well as catching, jumping and running are just some of the exercises included in the roll call of daily activities.

The Munch ‘n’ Move blueprint aims to bring down the rocketing rates of childhood obesity in NSW with one in five preschoolers now either overweight or obese.

Nearly 1000 preschools will implement the new healthy lifestyles policy within the next 18 months, with childhood teachers in 14 centres receiving their initial training this week.

“We do music and movement every day but this program also encourages us to do more structured exercise outside where we are teaching children the finer points in jumping, running, hopping, galloping and fundamental movement skills,” said educator Vicky Smith from Five Dock preschool, which is implementing the program.

NSW Health’s Centre for Health Advancement director Liz Develin said once the preschools were completed the program would be rolled out in long-day care centres.

She said that while some parents might question the need to force active three-year-olds into exercise, Ms Develin said recent research showed 89 per cent of children aged four to five spend more than two hours watching a screen every day.

A lot of three to five-year-olds have started these bad habits early,” Ms Develin said.

“If children are well equipped in fundamental movement skills they are more likely to participate in physical activity and sport later — they’ll have the basic skills of how to run, throw and jump rather than just running around erratically.”

Early childhood teachers will receive a 188-page manual outlining the details of the new exercise and food program, which includes giving children water rather than fruit poppers and cordials so that kids don’t develop a sweet tooth.

It also recommends limiting giving juice to once a day and to the 100 per cent variety, which is then diluted by water by at least half, and suggests reduced-fat milk for children over two.

NSW Health Minister Reba Meagher said the program was devised to combat the growing number of overweight preschoolers as well as educate parents.

“There is clear evidence that the number of people who are overweight or obese is increasing,” she told The Daily Telegraph.

By the time NSW children reach kindergarten nearly 18 per cent of them are either overweight or obese.”

Source: NEWS.com.au, Australia
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,23971871-2,00.html

4 July, 2008. 7:31 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Computer Games to Help Kids with ADHD

Computer games may have received a bad rap for fostering behavioural problems among young children, but one child psychologist has discovered some games have therapeutic benefits.

Andrew Campbell, a lecturer in psychology with the University of Sydney, has been researching ways to treat ADHD with therapeutic computer games. His ground-breaking research recently caught the attention of a major Singaporean gaming company, which is about to finalise a contract to fund an “e-lab” at the university.

Dr Campbell and PhD student Krestina Amon have discovered that an off-the-shelf computer game - in which the player wears bio-feedback sensors, and must use breathing and meditation techniques to advance through the levels - can markedly improve the stress and concentration levels of ADHD sufferers.

Now the international gaming company Nexon has agreed to fund Dr Campbell’s research and develop an e-lab within the University of Sydney’s Faculty of Health Sciences.

Together they plan to develop new therapeutic computer games that could increase self-esteem, reduce anxiety and help children manage ADHD.

“Nexon believes there is a whole new market for therapeutic games that deliver real outcomes, and we’ll provide the science,” Dr Campbell said.

The child psychologist hopes this treatment will offer parents an alternative to controversial stimulant medications used to treat ADHD.

“We’re not saying this is the holy grail of ADHD treatment, but our research has shown that therapeutic games can improve the concentration of those with mild or moderate ADHD.”

Source: The Australian, Austalia
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23869261-23289,00.html

16 June, 2008. 2:32 PM. Link | Comments: 1 Comment »

Early Connections with Children Are Crucial

Recently at a shopping mall, I sat next to a woman who was bouncing her baby on her lap. As mom looked into her baby’s eyes, her young daughter gazed back. As mom told stories about all the wonderful things they did that day, her baby responded in coos and smiles. They were communicating with each other. They were enjoying each other’s company. They were in sync.

This wasn’t just a feel-good moment for mom and daughter. It was an opportunity to shape the baby’s future.

When a parent connects with her child and responds to her cues, it lays the foundation for the child’s future development,” said Grazyna Kochanska, professor of developmental psychology at the University of Iowa.

These early connections don’t only promote a positive relationship between parent and child, but they may actually help improve a child’s behavior and yield other important benefits later in life.

In a study published in February in the journal Child Development, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, Kochanska and her colleagues found that preschool-age children who developed a close, positive, reciprocal and mutually responsive relationship with their mothers during the first two years of life were more likely to be cooperative, compliant and patient than children who hadn’t developed these strong ties.

Why?

”When you develop a mutually responsive relationship, your child becomes eager and willing to respond to your parenting influence. He’ll want to comply. Consequently, you greatly reduce the need to use power for controlling and disciplining your child,” Kochanska said. “Forceful, power-assertive discipline inevitably causes children’s anger and resentment. Therefore, when you do not need to resort to it, your child will probably be less oppositional and less defiant and more willing to adopt your requests and prohibitions. And when he does assert his independence, he’ll perhaps do it in a more appropriate and less angry way.”

Here are some practical tips to help foster close ties, from infancy through the school-age years:

Be aware.

”During infancy, pay attention to your baby’s cues and learn about them,” Kochanska suggested.

What comforts your baby? What does each type of cry mean? When you ask yourself these questions, you can begin to recognize the many ways your baby is communicating with you.

Be responsive.

”Respond quickly and consistently to your infant,” Kochanska said. “This lets your baby know you’re there for him and that you want to meet his needs.”

Make your response match what you think your baby is trying to tell you.

”As babies grow, the range of signals will increase,” Kochanska said. If your baby seems scared or upset, provide comfort. If he seems bored, try entertaining him.

Nurture the child’s independence.

”Your child will become more and more autonomous,” Kochanska said.

Provide plenty of opportunities for him to assert his independence, like choosing what shirt to wear or whether to eat oatmeal or eggs for breakfast. Of course, it’s critical to set appropriate limits and boundaries.

Play your child’s way.

”Designate a special time during the day when your child can take the lead in play,” Kochanska said. ‘If he says, `The toy goes there,’ don’t correct him or try it a different way. Simply pass him the toy and enthusiastically follow what he is doing.” This is another opportunity to let your child assert his independence.

Have fun.

”Shared good times are part of the glue that connects parents and children,” Kochanska said. ”When you share good times with someone, it’s natural that you’ll feel closer to each other.” She tells parents to laugh, be playful and find things you both like to do.

Value the everyday moments.

”Each opportunity you have to connect with your child is an important one,” Kochanska said. “It’s one of a million little building blocks that you are putting in day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, as you construct your relationship. Each of these interactions turns into thousands and thousands of positive experiences. And these really do matter.”

Source: MiamiHerald.com, FL
http://www.miamiherald.com/471/story/568523.html

15 June, 2008. 3:54 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Dads Increasingly Shape Kids’ Online Habits

Changing work habits are seeing the current generation of dads playing a more active role in the life of their children than their fathers, new research from has found.

As men increasingly receive paternity leave they are spending more and more time at home influencing their children’s media consumption habits.

The sway of mums still dominates in many households in the UK, but increasingly their partners are having more involvement in shaping behaviour.

The OMD Insight research found that parents find media a valuable tool in facilitating family time and family communication.

Dads are helping to foster kids online behaviour by surfing with their children as opposed to indulging in traditional playtime pursuits, according to new findings from OMD.

Gone are the days when fathers would fly a kite in the park, or go for a bicycle ride. Instead a new generation of dads are more like to be found in front of the computer monitor or laptop with their kids.

Dads have been found to connect with their children more through online games than mums. Just 32 per cent of mothers play online games with their kids once a week, as opposed to 42 per cent of fathers.

Kids also spend fractionally more time using e-mail with their dads (19 per cent) than their mums (18 per cent) once a week.

Search still comes tops for dads when on the internet. Respondents said it was their main reason for logging on during the past six months, with 84 per cent using the platform. E-mail and news/weather were the second most channels, used by 79 per cent.

Two thirds (66 per cent) admitted however that they had used the internet to search for parenting and child information. It falls short of the 89 per cent of women who searched for the same subject, but is significant all the same.

OMD found that parent and child related activity on the internet tends to be information orientated with both mums and dads looking at sites to help with parenting, schoolwork, health and nutrition.

Both dads and mums equally recognise the value of the internet for their children, but also want to monitor and value usage.

The majority of parents (70 per cent) felt is was important to monitor their childrens’ online activity but were glad the resource was there to help with their schoolwork.

Some 68 per cent also felt it was important for their children to use the internet and technology with other issues.

Source: Utalkmarketing, UK
http://tinyurl.com/5zkbhd

12 June, 2008. 9:21 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Teens Urged to Wake up to Dangers of ‘Junk Sleep’

Electronic gadgets too distracting, scientist says

British teenagers are damaging their health by not getting enough sleep because they are distracted by electronic gadgets in their bedrooms, according to a survey released Tuesday.

Advice body The Sleep Council said “junk sleep” could rival the consumption of unhealthy junk food as a major lifestyle issue for parents of teenage children.

Its poll of 1,000 youngsters aged 12 to 16 found that 30 per cent managed just four to seven hours of sleep as opposed to the recommended eight or nine hours.

Almost a quarter said they fell asleep more than once a week while watching TV, listening to music or using other electronic gadgets.

“This is an incredibly worrying trend,” said Dr. Chris Idzikowski of the Edinburgh Sleep Centre.

“What we are seeing is the emergence of Junk Sleep — that is sleep that is of neither the length nor quality that it should be in order to feed the brain with the rest it needs to perform properly at school.”

Nearly all the teenagers had a phone, music system or TV in their bedroom, with around two-thirds possessing all three.

Almost one in five of the teenage boys said the quality of their sleep had been affected by leaving their TV or computer on. The survey also found that 40 per cent of youngsters felt tired each day, with girls aged 15 to 16 faring the worst.

However, just 11 per cent said they were bothered by the lack or quality of their sleep.

“I’m staggered that so few teenagers make the link between getting enough good quality sleep and how they feel during the day,” Idzikowski said.

“Teenagers need to wake up to the fact that to feel well, perform well and look well, they need to do something about their sleep.”

Source: Canada.com, Canada
http://tinyurl.com/57k22g

10 June, 2008. 3:03 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Even Tots Have a Social Networking Site

You think a tween is too young to have a MySpace page?

That debate is so 10 minutes ago.

Soon, there will be a site meant for children ages birth to 5. Think of it as Facebook for toddlers.

On June 24, TotSpot (totspot.com) is scheduled to make its national debut. On it, moms and dads can create free pages about their children, posting photos and videos and dates of their first smiles, first steps and first day of kindergarten.

They can invite friends and relatives — and even parents of other babies from the play group — to view them.

Just like Facebook.

TotSpot is the brainchild of — who else? — two 20-something Harvard grads from the class of 2007. They were convinced the world needs yet another social networking site, this one for the bib-and-bottle-tending crowd.

“The network of friends that you would share things with professionally could be different from the network of people you want to share stuff about your children,” explains Adam Katz, who is from Long Island.

Katz started the site with Michael Broukhim of Los Angeles, whom he met at the Harvard University campus newspaper. The two wanted to do something entrepreneurial after graduation. “We got a sense parents wanted a very simple and easy way to share stuff with their friends,” Katz says.

There won’t be ads on the children’s pages; Katz says they hope to profit from turning sites into keepsake books.

Seven-month-old Maddox Wohl of Plainview already has a page, because his mother is one of the people who was invited to preview the site as it works out its kinks for its national launch.

“I absolutely love it,” says Maddox’s mom, Meredith Allison-Wohl, 35. “I really wish I’d thought of it. My family’s always bugging me, ‘Send pictures, send pictures.’ ” She says she feels more comfortable posting videos of Maddox to share with far-flung relatives on TotSpot than when she posted them on YouTube.

Only invited family and friends can view the page and its contents, Katz says. Users don’t have to worry about that competitive preschool finding out their toddler didn’t walk until he was 2, for instance. Or that their child went wild and smeared cupcake icing on her midriff at a birthday party.

In a way, TotSpot is formatted like an online baby book. Allison-Wohl posted, for instance, the first day that Maddox stood up. She’ll be able to post his first word and fill in an online growth chart.

All the people who are Maddox’s “friends” on TotSpot can get an e-mail notification every time Allison-Wohl posts something new. If he goes to Gymboree class, for instance, she can post pictures and tag other TotSpot users to let them know if their children are in any of the photos. “It’s addicting,” Allison-Wohl says.

Larry Rosen, author of Me MySpace and I: Parenting the Net Generation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), said TotSpot “does what the Internet is supposed to do — which is to find ways to bring people closer.”

It also helps parents to understand what social networking is all about — in preparation for the days when their now-babies will become 7- and 8-year-olds who want to play on their own sites, such as Club Penguin. “There is so much fear that has built up around social networking,” Rosen says, which this can help to dispel.

The network could help parents looking for a support group, says Justine Cassell, director of The Center for Technology and Social Behavior at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. The center examines the impact of new technologies on society.

If a parent posts a notice that her child just took her first step, it’s not likely that viewers will respond with, “So? Every child walks,” Cassell says. Instead, they will offer their congratulations. “That’s going to feel good to the parents.”

The friends and families? They are totally on board. Well, at least speaking for Maddox’s grandmother in New Jersey.

“What, are you kidding? I love it,” says Maddox’s maternal grandmother, Laurie Allison, of Barnegat, N.J. “I play the videos constantly whenever I just want a little cheering up.”

Source: Seattle Times, United States
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/living/2004462811_kidnetwork07.html

7 June, 2008. 1:07 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Are Male Teachers Like Dads?

In other words, less responsible than moms? I hate to stereotype, but, um, turn up the volume, I’m about to start.

I recently did a story on dads and how they are different (duh) than moms, for Canadian Family magazine. (You can find this issue on stands now at Indigo, Chapters, and the usual magazine places.) Besides the anecdotal evidence any parent can provide, studies have also found that dads are more active, rough-and-tumble and boundary-pushing than moms. (Well, maybe not the ones at our old trendy Toronto playground– the dads there seemed to be more working-some-deals, Blackberry-pushing than anything else.)

I think as far as moms go, I fall on the more laissez-faire side of things, active-play wise. If her playroom ends up looking like a hotel room that the Libertines tore through, Doherty blood smear paintings on the wall and all (in her case, paint, y’know, most of the time), I tend not to mind since I know I’ll be tossing some of the toys into the clean-and-donate pile while she’s at school and therefore making some headway through the headwaters of clutter. Also, it’s her playroom, so I figure she can play in it the way she wants as long as she realizes things don’t work that way in most homes (which she does realize.)

Nonetheless, the extent to which my parenting differs from my partner’s often amazes me. (Junk food: “She can eat as much as she wants, she knows when to stop.” Supervision: “Yeah, I was watching her but a lot can happen in a minute. I just turned away and then I heard a scream and that’s why she’s covered in blood. She fell on the stairs. But as you can see, she’s fine!”)

He’s a primary school teacher too, so I find myself often asking aloud, “So, you started the day with how many kids? And at the end of the afternoon, they’re all there? Alive? Accounted for?”

Case in point, yesterday, he decided to let the 8-year-old boys in his class ride an abandoned trike they found in the local park, down a hill, while being pelted by pine cones. “Omigod–it was so funny!” he howled, “It was like an episode of Jackass, only with small kids! They took turns riding down the hill on this toddler trike, and meanwhile all the other boys were throwing handful after handful of pine cones at whoever was on the bike. Then they’d chant, ‘Who wants to go on the Ride of Terror?’ and start all over again!”

So the first things that go through my mind are, litigation issues and also unemployment issues. “Yeah, the principal gave me a hard time about letting the kids go down the hill on magic carpets last winter,” he sighed.

Wondering why any sane teacher would let boys tear down a hill on a trike while being pelted by pine cones, I asked, “Why would any sane teacher let boys tear down the hill on a trike while being pelted by pine cones?

Because they were having fun, that’s why. They’d just finished practicing for the standardized testing, and they needed to burn off steam. Also, that little wussy boy whose mom came in to talk with me about how he had no friends and wasn’t adjusting well, was finally fitting in. He was one of the first kids on the trike! He tore down the hill and he loved it!

What were the girls doing?

“They thought the trike was stupid. They were pretending to make food out of grass and sticks and were playing out some scenarios and stuff.”

Source: AOL Life & Style Canada, Canada
http://blogs.lifestyle.aol.ca/2008/05/28/are-male-teachers-like-dads/

29 May, 2008. 8:15 AM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

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