Posts Tagged ‘Education’

A Cautionary Tale for Frustrated Teachers

June 5, 2014

 

As this video shows, try to resist badmouthing your students and their parents, because one day you are likely to get caught … and it won’t be pretty:

 

One Elyria, Ohio, mother is extremely upset about the message she received recently from her son’s kindergarten teacher.

After the Crestwood Elementary School teacher left a standard message for mother Ashley Moore, the teacher apparently thought she had hung up the phone and began bad-mouthing Moore’s son while still on the line, according to Ohio outlet WOIO-TV. The teacher’s harsh opinion of the boy was recorded on Moore’s phone.

“He has no common sense,” the teacher — who has not been identified — said in the recording. “He was 7 in May, and he’s the biggest baby in my group. She still probably wipes his butt.”

Moore told The New York Daily News that the call was supposed to deal with her son’s educational progress. The boy reportedly has ADHD, autistic tendencies and gross motor skills issues.

Moore says she has enrolled her son in a new school. “He’s afraid,” she told WOIO. “He does not want to go back to her [the teacher].”

In response to the incident, the director of communications for Elyria City Schools released the following statement, per the Daily News:

Her actions certainly don’t represent the district’s philosophy or the partnerships we have with our parents. We know that individuals can become frustrated but there is no excuse for what occurred and the comments this teacher made.

Superintendent Paul Rigda also told the outlet: “This certainly isn’t how we expect our teachers to behave. … At the same time we understand that they are human. They do have their emotions and opinions and they can vent at the end of the year. I get it, but she crossed a line.”

 

Click on the link to read Teacher Sought Dating Advice from Her Fourth Graders
Click on the link to read Teacher Suspended for 10 Days for Grabbing a 6-Year-Old By the Neck (Video)
Click on the link to read Middle School Teacher Gives Student a Lap Dance
Click on the link to read When an Apology is Not Nearly Enough

Click on the link to read The Type of Teacher We Should be Glad to See Punished

Click on the link to read Primary School Teacher Catches Herself in the Act (Video)

Tips to Get Kids to Eat More Fruit

June 2, 2014

 

 

 

fruit

A well compiled list on a very real challenge courtesy of The Times:

 

1. Serve children the fruits they like, even if it is at the expense of variety. There is no reason why kids who love bananas shouldn’t have one every day. Eventually, parents can add variety by combining a favorite fruit with new ones.

2. Fruit can be eaten at any time of day as a snack, and not just as a dessert. Consider serving fruit to kids with breakfast, as an after-school snack, or even in a salad with dinner.

3. Set a good example. It is well established that children tend to imitate their parents’ behavior, particularly at mealtimes. So parents should set the example by eating plenty of fruit themselves.

4. Prepare fruit in front of children or involve them in the process. Whether it’s scooping out melon balls for fruit salad, washing berries, or coring apples, giving children a task in preparing fruit will make them more likely to enjoy eating the result.

5. Provide easy access to fruit. Keep a bowl of fruit on the kitchen table and allow kids to help themselves. For children who enjoy eating fruit, sometimes the best way to boost their intake is simply to remind them to eat it when they’re hungry.

 

Click on the link to read 6 Year Old Suspended for 4 Days Because of Cheese in his Lunchbox

Click on the link to read Invaluable Rules for Getting Kids to Heat Healthy Food

Click on the link to read Tips to get Children to Eat Better and Exercise More Often

Click on the link to read 10 Tips for Promoting Kids’ Healthy Eating

Click on the link to read my post on Tips For Parents on Packing a Healthy Lunch Box

Click on the link to read my post on Getting Kids to Eat Healthy Food

10 Tips to Help Children Enjoy Reading

June 1, 2014

reading

Courtesy of uk.pearson.com:

 

Make books part of your family life – Always have books around so that you and your children are ready to read whenever there’s a chance.

Join your local library – Get your child a library card. You’ll find the latest videogames, blu-rays and DVDs, plus tons and tons of fantastic books. Allow them to pick their own books, encouraging their own interests.

Match their interests – Help them find the right book – it doesn’t matter if it’s fiction, poetry, comic books or non-fiction. Try our top recommendations.

All reading is good – Don’t discount non-fiction, comics, graphic novels, magazines and leaflets. Reading is reading and it is all good.

Get comfortable! – Snuggle up somewhere warm and cosy with your child, either in bed, on a beanbag or on the sofa, or make sure they have somewhere comfy when reading alone.

Ask questions – To keep them interested in the story, ask your child questions as you read such as, ‘What do you think will happen next?’ or ‘Where did we get to last night? Can you remember what had happened already?’

Read whenever you get the chance – Bring along a book or magazine for any time your child has to wait, such as at a doctor’s surgery.

Rhyme and repetition – Books and poems which include rhyme and repetition are great for encouraging your child or children to join in and remember the words.

 

Click on the link to read 17 Children’s Books You Still Love as an Adult

Click on the link to read The Telegraph’s Best Children’s Book of All Time

Click on the link to read The New York Public Library’s 100 Most Requested Children’s Books

Click on the link to read Stunning Photographs of the Most Beautiful Libraries in the World

Click on the link to read The Call to Stop Kids From Reading Books they Actually Enjoy

Click on the link to read The Classic Children’s Books they Tried to Ban

Click on the link to read How Spelling Mistakes can Turn a Compliment into Something Quite Different.

A Preschooler’s Most Memorable Graduation Speech (Video)

June 1, 2014

 

 

Click on the link to read Is “Bubble Wrapping” Your Child Really Worthwhile?

Click on the link to read The Ease in Which Our Children Can be Brainwashed (Video)

Click on the link to read Teaching Young Children the 3Rs Could be Damaging: Psychologist

Click on the link to read 7 Ways To Teach Kids Self-Awareness

Click on the link to read Kids Explain the Meaning of Happiness

Michael Michalko’s 7 Principles of Creative Thinking

May 28, 2014

 

creative

Courtesy of edutopia.org:

 

1. You Are Creative

Artists are not special, but each of us is a special kind of artist who enters the world as a creative and spontaneous thinker. While creative people believe they are creative, those who don’t hold that belief are not. After acquiring beliefs about their identity, creative people become interested in expressing themselves, so they learn thinking habits and techniques that creative geniuses have used throughout history.

2. Creative Thinking is Work

You must show passion and the determination to immerse yourself in the process of developing new and different ideas. The next step is patience and perseverance. All creative geniuses work with intensity and produce an incredible number of ideas — most of which are bad. In fact, more bad poems were written by major poets than by minor poets. Thomas Edison generated 3,000 different lighting system ideas before he evaluated them for practicality and profitability.

3. You Must Go Through the Motions

When producing ideas, you replenish neurotransmitters linked to genes that are being turned on and off in response to challenges. Going through the motions of generating new ideas increases the number of contacts between neurons, and thereby energizes the brain. Every hour spent activating your mind by generating ideas increases creativity. By painting a picture every day, you would become an artist — perhaps not Van Gogh, but more of an artist than someone who has never tried.

4. Your Brain is Not a Computer

Your brain is a dynamic system that evolves patterns of activity, rather than simply processing them like a computer. The brain thrives on creative energy that results from experiences, real or fictional. The brain cannot tell the difference between an “actual” experience and one that is imagined vividly and in detail. Both are energizing. This principle helped Walt Disney bring his fantasies to life and also enabled Albert Einstein to engage in thought experiments that led to revolutionary ideas about space and time. For example, Einstein imagined falling in love and then meeting the woman he fell in love with two weeks later. This led to his theory of acausality.

5. There is No Right Answer

Aristotle believed that things were either “A” or “not A.” To him the sky was blue or not blue — never both. Such dualistic thinking is limiting. After all, the sky is a billion different shades of blue. We used to think that a beam of light existed only as a wave until physicists discovered that light can be either a wave or a particle, depending on the viewpoint of the observer. The only certainty in life is uncertainty. Therefore when trying to produce new ideas, do not evaluate them as they occur. Nothing kills creativity faster than self-censorship during idea generation. All ideas are possibilities — generate as many as you can before identifying which ones have more merit. The world is not black or white. It is gray.

6. There is No Such Thing as Failure

Trying something without succeeding is not failing. It’s producing a result. What you do with the result — that is, what you’ve learned — is the important thing. Whenever your efforts have produced something that doesn’t work, ask the following:

  • What have I learned about what doesn’t work?
  • Can this explain something that I didn’t set out to explain?
  • What have I discovered that I didn’t set out to discover?

People who “never” make mistakes have never tried anything new. Noting that Thomas Edison had “failed” to successfully create a filament for the light bulb after 10,000 attempts, an assistant asked why the inventor didn’t give up. Edison didn’t accept what the assistant meant by failure. “I have discovered ten thousand things that don’t work,” he explained.

7. You Don’t See Things as They Are –
You See Them as You Are

All experiences are neutral and without inherent meaning until your interpretations give them meaning. Priests see evidence of God everywhere, while atheists see the absence of God everywhere. Back when nobody in the world owned a personal computer, IBM’s market research experts speculated that there were no more than six people on earth who needed a PC. While IBM saw no market potential for PCs, two college dropouts named Bill Gates and Steve Jobs viewed the same data as IBM and perceived massive opportunity. You construct reality by how you choose to interpret your experiences.

 

Click on the link to read Why Many Teachers Don’t Bother Making Their Lessons Interesting

Click on the link to read Why is it Always the Kids’ Fault?

Click on the link to read Student Shot by Teacher Protests His Sacking

Click on the link to read Science Not For the Faint Hearted (Video)

Click on the link to read 7 Tips for Building a Better School Day

Click on the link to read Student Rant Goes Viral

 

 

Hilarious Video Showing the Reaction of Children to Old Computers

May 26, 2014

 

 

How times have changed! My 2 year-old knows how to navigate an iPad without any problem, whilst our family didn’t even invest in a home computer until I was in 12th grade. Imagine if a child of today were told that they can have their first computer or smart phone when they turn 17?

The technology itself has changed markedly in that time as highlighted by this video.

 

Click on the link to read New App Encourages Kids to Flush their Teacher Down the Toilet

Click on the link to read Are Violent Video Games Worse for Children than Violent Movies?
Click on the link to read Parents Shouldn’t Be in Denial Over This Very Real Addiction

Click on the link to read Video Game Addiction is Real and Very Serious!

Click on the link to read Internet Addiction and our Children

 

 

Is “Bubble Wrapping” Your Child Really Worthwhile?

May 25, 2014

 

bubble

We all do it. Too afraid to risk a serious injury to your precious child we say, “Steer clear of that” or “Get off that ledge”. Nobody wants to see their child break a bone or scream in pain.

As a stay-at-home father I take my son to a park almost ever single day. The idea is to let him run around and enjoy the fresh air. But let’s face it, the average park is a great disappointment.  The equipment is designed to seem fun, but when tested is severely underwhelming. The slides are slow, the climbing apparatus is hardly off the ground and the greatest element of danger is being accidentally bumped into by another eager child. Park designers are simply afraid of potential lawsuits, so they design a layout high on colour and style and low on substance.

I read the following opinion piece in an online Canadian newspaper. I couldn’t agree with it more:

 

Imagine spending childhood outdoors, running, playing and even, heaven forbid, getting dirty.

Not only does it sound like a lot more fun than a play date booked three weeks in advance at an indoor gym under the protective watch of parents, but it’s also healthier.

And, unfortunately, it’s something that fewer and fewer Canadian children get to do, putting them at risk of growing overweight or just out of shape and, frankly, unadventurous.

As the Star’s Diana Zlomislic reported this past week, the first global report card to measure childhood physical activity gives Canadian youngsters an embarrassing D-minus score, behind top-rated countries like New Zealand, Mexico and even benighted Mozambique.

Leave aside the pointless comparison with a desperately poor country where kids do physical domestic chores like collecting water and walk to school as a matter of course. Ranked beside comparable countries, Canada still looks bad. Parents here may spend significant sums on structured activities but only 4 per cent of young people aged 12 to 17 get an hour of high cardio activity each day, according to a report by Active Healthy Kids Canada.

While it’s long been known that children are devoted to video games and parents stuck in gridlock run out of time to go outside with their kids and play, it’s fair to suggest that a little extra effort is needed.

Release those youngsters from the parental “bubblewrap,” as Healthy Kids’ researchers rightly suggest, and give them the freedom to play. Outdoor, unstructured play can provide kids with better exercise than the expensive programming.

As Healthy Kids’ chief scientific officer Dr. Mark Tremblay says, “We need to stop treating physical activity like a vitamin, something you take once a day.”

 

Teacher Sought Dating Advice from Her Fourth Graders

May 23, 2014

 

cassandre fiering

 

Perhaps she should have asked for advice on how to conduct herself professionally instead:

A New York City teacher has been fired after asking for relationship advice about her two boyfriends from fourth graders, investigators say.

Substitute teacher Cassandre Fiering, 45, even had the students role-play conversations with her about how she should talk to the men, who were both in their 30s, according to the kids – who were ages nine and ten.

She allegedly told them that they were her ‘munchkins’ and invited them to dress up like ‘demons’ and scare one of her boyfriends and ‘toilet-paper’ his house.

The bizarre counseling session happened in June 2013 at Public School 189 in the Bronx, New York, DNA Info reports. 

A report from the city Department of Education Special Commissioner of Investigation also alleged that she touched one student on the shoulder and touch two others on their thighs.

Ms Fiering says she was stuck with five fourth graders all day with no lesson plan. The rest of the class had gone on a field trip. 

She was paid less than $155 for the day.

She disputed the findings of the report and promised to hire a lawyer to fight her firing.

‘The report is blatant lies,’ Ms Fiering, who also works as an actress, told the New York Daily News.

‘We were talking about relationships, it was all theoretical. It was an all-day situation and I was in the room for seven hours without a lesson plan.’

How is not being provided with lesson plans an excuse? I would love to meet a substitute teacher who has never been left without a lesson plan. I doubt they exist. When I was a substitute teacher I was rarely given work, or even an insight into what math skill or science topic they were covering. I don’t understand how you could survive as a substitute teacher without a folder full of per-prepared lessons and activities.

Click on the link to read When an Apology is Not Nearly Enough

Click on the link to read The Type of Teacher We Should be Glad to See Punished

Click on the link to read Primary School Teacher Catches Herself in the Act (Video)

Click on the link to read An Example of Teacher Sanctioned Torture at its Worst

A New York teacher has been fired after asking her fourth-grade class for love advice and conducting a “role play” in which students pretended to be her boyfriend.

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Cassandre Fiering, 45, was dating two men in their 30s and reportedly asked the class to help her choose which one to dump, according to a bizarre school board report quoted by the NY Post.

Investigators claim the substitute teacher, who also works as an actress, asked students aged 9 to 10 years old to dress up as “demons” to scare one of her younger lovers.

“Fiering said that one of the men she was dating was a mechanic and that she wanted the students to be her ‘munchkins’ and to go ‘toilet paper’ the boyfriend’s house,” the report reads.

They also claim she touched two of the students on the thigh and another on the shoulder.

Fiering told the NY Post the allegations were “blatant lies” and she conducted a classroom discussion about relationships before being fired last December.

Read more at http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/2014/05/22/11/36/us-teacher-fired-for-seeking-love-advice-from-kids#YQvK4KXllutj3rvf.99

A New York teacher has been fired after asking her fourth-grade class for love advice and conducting a “role play” in which students pretended to be her boyfriend.

  • 9RAW: NSW hoon tries to flee police
    Fleeing hoon injures woman, 70, five police Four hours ago
  • Federal opposition leader Tony Abbott with his daughters Bridget and Frances. (AAP)
    Classmates criticise Abbott scholarship Five hours ago
  • Palaszczuk defends backbencher’s nazi comparison
    Queensland Labor leader cries for grandfather Five hours ago
  • Bullfight called off after matadors gored
    Bullfight called off after matadors gored
  • Student protests erupt across Australia
    Student protests erupt across Australia
  • March in May protest signs
    March in May protest signs

Cassandre Fiering, 45, was dating two men in their 30s and reportedly asked the class to help her choose which one to dump, according to a bizarre school board report quoted by the NY Post.

Investigators claim the substitute teacher, who also works as an actress, asked students aged 9 to 10 years old to dress up as “demons” to scare one of her younger lovers.

“Fiering said that one of the men she was dating was a mechanic and that she wanted the students to be her ‘munchkins’ and to go ‘toilet paper’ the boyfriend’s house,” the report reads.

They also claim she touched two of the students on the thigh and another on the shoulder.

Fiering told the NY Post the allegations were “blatant lies” and she conducted a classroom discussion about relationships before being fired last December.

Read more at http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/2014/05/22/11/36/us-teacher-fired-for-seeking-love-advice-from-kids#YQvK4KXllutj3rvf.99

A New York teacher has been fired after asking her fourth-grade class for love advice and conducting a “role play” in which students pretended to be her boyfriend.

  • 9RAW: NSW hoon tries to flee police
    Fleeing hoon injures woman, 70, five police Four hours ago
  • Federal opposition leader Tony Abbott with his daughters Bridget and Frances. (AAP)
    Classmates criticise Abbott scholarship Five hours ago
  • Palaszczuk defends backbencher’s nazi comparison
    Queensland Labor leader cries for grandfather Five hours ago
  • Bullfight called off after matadors gored
    Bullfight called off after matadors gored
  • Student protests erupt across Australia
    Student protests erupt across Australia
  • March in May protest signs
    March in May protest signs

Cassandre Fiering, 45, was dating two men in their 30s and reportedly asked the class to help her choose which one to dump, according to a bizarre school board report quoted by the NY Post.

Investigators claim the substitute teacher, who also works as an actress, asked students aged 9 to 10 years old to dress up as “demons” to scare one of her younger lovers.

“Fiering said that one of the men she was dating was a mechanic and that she wanted the students to be her ‘munchkins’ and to go ‘toilet paper’ the boyfriend’s house,” the report reads.

They also claim she touched two of the students on the thigh and another on the shoulder.

Fiering told the NY Post the allegations were “blatant lies” and she conducted a classroom discussion about relationships before being fired last December.

Read more at http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/2014/05/22/11/36/us-teacher-fired-for-seeking-love-advice-from-kids#YQvK4KXllutj3rvf.99

Anti-Bullying Song Goes Viral

May 16, 2014

 

 

I’m not a fan of television talent shows because I find them exploitative and I feel manipulated as a viewer. I also object to the audience reaction shots and backstage interruptions. But having said that, much credit must be given to the young singers above for their stellar performance and for taking the anti-bullying message to millions of people worldwide:

 

Two teenage boys wowed the Britain’s Got Talent judges with their rendition of Faith Evans and Twista’s “Hope,” changing the rap verses to reflect their feelings about bullying.

The duo — Bars and Melody — delivered an emotional performance that brought audience members to their feet and tears to some of their eyes. The video from last week’s show has since gone viral, attracting nearly 8 million views.

“I like the fact that they wrote their own song based on life experiences,” judge Simon Cowell told ITV on the network’s website after the audition. “People are going to root for them and they’ve got this great friendship that is so obvious when you watch them together.

The judges have moved Bars and Melody into Britain’s Got Talent’s semi-finals.

But the good news doesn’t stop there. It appears Bars and Melody has influenced bullies to apologize to their victims or stop their bullying altogether:

nicole

 

Click on the link to read Some Schools Just Don’t Get it When it Comes to Bullying

Click on the link to read The Bystander Experiment (Video)

Click on the link to read Tips for Managing Workplace Bullying

Click on the link to read 12,000 Students a Year Change Schools Due to Bullying

Click on the link to read The Devastating Effects of Bullying (Video)

Click on the link to read Sickening Video of Girl Being Bullied for Having Ginger Hair

Is it Ever OK to Lie to Your Kids?

May 14, 2014

 

lie

I’m not fond of the idea of lying to your children. The relationship between a child and his/her parents or teacher should be based on trust. When that trust is broken, even for an innocent white lie, it is hard to fully repair.

I know the following list compiled by writer Aaron Gouveia is tongue in cheek, but I couldn’t help feel that some of these innocent white lies are not worth the trouble of telling. Not only did I find this list unfunny but perhaps even objectionable. What do you think?

 

19. “It’s time for bed.”
Technically, bedtime is in an hour. But since I’ve had a long day, you can’t tell time, and the end of daylight saving time has brought on the sweet merciful darkness, the night-night train is boarding early.

18. “Oh honey, this tastes delicious.”
No it doesn’t. I don’t care that it’s called “Dada’s Surprise,” because I know the surprise is you took a little bit of everything in the house and mixed it together to create this abomination currently accosting my taste buds. I can’t prove you did it on purpose because you know I’m parentally obligated to imbibe it, but we both know you’re old enough to realize milk and orange juice don’t go together.

17. “That drawing is FANTASTIC!”
Look, I’m your dad. I’m never going to tell you something you worked hard on sucks. But why do you insist on playing this game where you make me guess what you drew? If I’m being honest, it looks like a sphincter with three arms — not Batman. In the future, just tell me what you drew so we don’t set ourselves up for mutual disappointment.

16. “No, I don’t know where your art project went.”
Yes I do. I threw it away. Not to be mean, but because I have to. Seriously, buddy, you bring home five art projects a day from school. Our kitchen wall is filled with your creations. If I don’t make at least a little room, we’ll be on Hoarders in a hot second.

15. “My phone is dead.”
Can I play with your phone? Can I play with your phone? Can I play with your phone? Sometimes I give in and placate you, but dammit IT’S MY PHONE AND I WANT TO PLAY WITH IT! So I lie to you and tell you it’s dead in the hopes you’ll get distracted by something shiny and allow me to tweet about how annoying it is when young kids are completely hooked on technology.

14. “Your mom and I are going to bed, too.”
After a certain point, The Bedtime Wars drag on so much that anything is fair game. Which means I will lie to you and say whatever is necessary to put you down. So yes, of course we’re all going to bed. Don’t mind the sound of the TV downstairs, I’m just leaving it on for the dog.

13. “No, I don’t think you’re getting a shot at the doctor’s today.”
Actually, you’re getting four shots. Which means I really didn’t lie.

12. “We can’t have a cat because you’re allergic to them.”
We’ve never had you tested, so technically this might not be a lie either. But I will tell 1,000 lies if it keeps those godforsaken felines out of my domicile.

11. “The dog ate your candy.”
Unlike cats, dogs are fantastic animals and man’s best friend. They are also a great tool for parents to shift blame. Because the truth is, I ate your candy. I’m not even sure how a box of Thin Mints became yours. I paid for the damn things. I should just be able to tell you I ate them because I was hungry and dammit this is my house! But then you hit me with those sad eyes and I have no choice but to do the right thing — blame an innocent and much beloved household pet.

10. “Babies are made when two people really love each other.”
Or when two people have too much wine. Or the condom breaks. Or mommy forgets to take her special pill. Or the vasectomy doesn’t take.

9. “Santa/The Easter Bunny/The Tooth Fairy doesn’t come if you don’t poop in the potty.”
Yeah, we actually told Will this when he was potty training. MJ and I got a six-pack of beer, blocked him in the bathroom, and waited him out. Then, at the end of our ropes, she told him the Easter Bunny would skip his house if he didn’t poop in the toilet. Thirty seconds later, he dropped a few chocolate nuggets in the porcelain basket, and potty training was finished. See? Lying is just good parenting.

8. “I think your favorite stuffed animal is on vacation.”
If by “vacation” you really mean somewhere in the 50-mile stretch between the grocery store, pet store, and toy store, then yes — he’s on vacation. A permanent one. Ultimately, this will end in disaster and tears and crying and refusal to sleep without your old friend, which is exactly why I’m going to lie to you for as long as you’ll buy it. Sometimes parenting is strictly about survival.

7. “The toy store/candy store/Disney World is closed.”
I’ve told you no. Repeatedly. I’ve explained to you with perfect logic and reason why we can’t go to any of the ridiculous places you’re begging me to go. But you don’t care. It’s not your job to care. I get that. But it’s my job to be on time (or at least not ridiculously late), which means it’s a million times easier to lie to you and tell you the place you want to go is closed. Some day you’ll be able to tell time and this ruse won’t work, but today is not that day.

6. “We’re all out of ice cream.”
Until you go up to bed. Then it’s ice cream city up in here.

5. “It’s a tie.”
Bullsh*t! I won. Not only that, I mopped the floor with you. It wasn’t even close. I’m not sure why I have to spare your feelings, since it’ll only be a few years until you’re older, I’m weaker, and you dance on my withered bones once you’re able to defeat me in just about everything.

4. “Caillou isn’t on TV anymore.”
Not on OUR TV, anyway. That bald-headed whiny little sh*t.

3. “Yes, your fish has been very sleepy lately.”
Someday, when you’re older and I’m mentally prepared, I’ll tell you that Nemo now sleeps with the fishes. But in the meantime, your sleepy fish will be totally reinvigorated as soon as the pet store opens.

2. “We won’t let anything happen to you.”
For my money, this is the best (and most necessary) lie on the list. And make no mistake — it is a lie. We can strive to protect our kids all we want, but we’ll never have complete control. If gunmen walk into the school, a driver crosses the double yellow line, or armed robbers break into our house, then parents are hard-pressed to be able to keep this promise. But you can bet your ass I’ll keep promising my boys this until the day I die. Because it’s the right thing to do to make your kids feel safe.

1. “Your mom and I were just… wrestling.”
Mom is on top of me because she’s trying to pin me. No, you can’t play too. Yes, we need a lock on the bedroom door.

 

Click on the link to read 9 Characteristics of a Great Teacher According to Parents

Click on the link to read 9 Secrets for Raising Happy Children

Click on the link to read Brilliant Prank Photos Show Parenting at its Worst

Click on the link to read Little Girl’s Delightful “Brake Up” Note

Click on the link to read 9 Truths About Children and Dinnertime

Click on the link to read The Most Original Way to Pull Out Your Child’s Tooth Out (Video)