Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Anticipation...by Judy Lyden


The word anticipation has more than one meaning. In the best sense of the word, anticipation means to be conscious of others. In a world that seems to have sprung from Narcissus's lake at a rate of a # 5 hurricane, anticipating one another will definitely be the last thing on our list unless we come to realize that anticipating others makes life a lot easier for ourselves.

Christ spoke of it. "Anticipate one another." I've spent a lifetime wondering what people think this really means.

Here are some little examples of what I think anticipation is:

I am driving down the highway and I notice in the distance that the "on ramp" has a string of traffic, so I get into the fast lane NOW to avoid a compromise thirty seconds later.

I am pouring a cup of coffee at 5:45 a.m. and glance at the counter where the crock pot has been sitting for a month. As I drink my coffee, I put a pound of frozen meat, a package of carrots, some tomato sauce, bouillon, and a cup of wine into it and plug it in, so that a delicious dinner can be ready and waiting for my family when I return from work.

I know my kids will need OTC meds this winter, so the next time I'm at the drug store, I collect all the things I think they will need next time they are ill including two big liters of ginger ale to be hidden until needed.

I am racing to the door of my building, and there is an older woman who is just reaching the top of the stairs. I know it will be a hardship for her to handle that flight and then a heavy door. I stop, wait, and open the door for her.

My best friend's birthday is around the corner. I spend a few minutes next time I am on Amazon to look for that book she has been talking about. I buy the book so that it is in my possession when her birthday arrives.

I know that it's a busy time of year for my daughter with kids, so I purposely set time aside to help out with the Christmas rush, so I volunteer to sit or run errands or clean or do whatever is needed.

Anticipation of others means thinking about someone else first. It means making the coffee first, changing the paper towel first, answering the phone...It means doing a little extra to make someone else's life easier or better, and consequently, making things easier for ourselves.

But anticipation means thinking it through. It means thinking about what might or could be needed at any point in time and doing the work that's needed. Nobody can cover it all, but even covering a little more every day will matter to the people around you.

One of the nice things that was anticipated for me recently was the removal of the Christmas Tree at school. I always do this the day after the big school Santa party, so that the general clean up can begin. My friend and teacher, Nita, offered to come help me. Usually, I do this alone, and it's a big job, but this year, Nita anticipated my need and helped. It was a HUGE help and much appreciated.

Follow through is the activity most people struggle with. Making sure things are finished in a timely and happy way is the downfall of many of us. By anticipating the struggle, anyone can make following through easier. Let's look at a child's art project as an example.

It's a two day project. It involves paint, glue, parts, thread, glitter and eyes! Before you head into this, the problems will arise from one thing - children's lack of organizational skills. So to avoid that, anticipate what will happen. By putting a name on every part so that when something inevitably falls on the floor, we know who it belongs to, and the endless confusion is lessened. Making a place in advance for every child's work to dry helps. Make sure every child has a pre-named bundle to begin with will eliminate confusion and create a manageable scheme of doing every step. Many teachers would simply begin, and then get angry when chaos breaks out. The point is to anticipate the chaos and stave it off with a before the fact organization...thinking it through.

One of my jobs is to feed, water and clean our zoo room every day. I need a lot of supplies to keep more than ten species of birds and animals fed and clean so that the zoo room will be a healthy and happy little place. I anticipate problems I might find in the zoo room, including buying the supplies I need before I absolutely need them, and I make sure I am at school way ahead of the children so that I can "fix" any possible problem. One morning I came in to six baby bunnies strewn across the floor. If I had walked in with the first child, he or she would have seen that.

In everything we do there are anticipations of other people's needs. Thinking about others begins with thinking about ourselves. What would I want if I were in their place? What do they need that I can supply. It's a life saver anyway you look at it.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Monday's Tattler


Good Morning!

It's another school day today. We open at the regular time: 7:00 a.m. and it will be a full day of school. This week we will be taking a look at geography and what geography is. We will look at the globe and some maps, and will concentrate on the Polar regions. We will watch Shackleton's adventure to the South Pole. I could not find Whale Blubber anywhere, so we will not be sampling this treat during our Polar studies.

Today's fare is Lasagna with fresh fruit and a big salad.

Please remember to have children wear long sleeves during these cold days.

And a kindly reminder that children requiring over the counter medication in the morning should be evaluated for illness. Please keep illness at home. Children who are kept home from school on their first day of illness will recover much more quickly.

Children will need coats, hats, and mittens every day.

Children's social theme this week is on "anticipating the needs of others." Article to follow this week here on the blog.

Have a great week!

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Wacky Wonderful Wednesday


Last minute Christmas gift?


What is the main ingredient of WD-40?
Before you read to the end, does anybody know what the main ingredient of WD-40 is? Don't lie and don't cheat.

Who knew; I had a neighbor who bought a new pickup. I got up very early one Sunday morning and saw that someone had spray painted red all around the sides of this beige truck (for some unknown reason). I went over, woke him up, and told him the bad news. He was very upset and was trying to figure out what to do.... Probably nothing until Monday morning, since nothing was open. Another neighbor came out and told him to get his WD-40 and clean it off. It removed the unwanted paint beautifully and did not harm his paint job that was on the truck. I'm impressed!

WD-40 who knew? 'Water Displacement #40'. The product began from a search for a rust preventative solvent and de-greaser to protect missile parts. WD-40 was created in 1953 by three technicians at the San Diego Rocket Chemical Company. Its name comes from the project that was to find a 'water displacement' compound. They were successful with the fortieth formulation, thus WD-40. The convert Company bought it in bulk to protect their atlas missile parts. Ken East (one of the original founders) says there is nothing in WD-40 that would hurt you... When you read the 'shower door' part, try it. It's the first thing that has ever cleaned that spotty shower door. If yours is plastic, it works just as well as glass. It's a miracle! Then try it on your stove top ... Viola! It's now shinier than it's ever been. You'll be amazed.


1. Protects silver from tarnishing.
2. Removes road tar and grime from cars.
3. Cleans and lubricates guitar strings.
4. Gives floors that 'just-waxed' sheen without making them slippery.
5. Keeps flies off cows. (I love this one!)
6. Restores and cleans chalkboards.
7. Removes lipstick stains.
8. Loosens stubborn zippers.
9. Untangles jewelry chains.
10. Removes stains from stainless steel sinks.
11. Removes dirt and grime from the barbecue grill.
12. Keeps ceramic/terra cotta garden pots from oxidizing.
13. Removes tomato stains from clothing.
14. Keeps glass shower doors free of water spots.
15. Camouflages scratches in ceramic and marble floors.
16. Keeps scissors working smoothly.
17. Lubricates noisy door hinges on vehicles and doors in homes.
18. It removes black scuff marks from the kitchen floor! Use WD-40 for those nasty tar and scuff marks on flooring. It doesn't seem to harm the finish and you won't have to scrub nearly as hard to get them off. Just remember to open some windows if you have a lot of marks.
19. Bug guts will eat away the finish on your car if not removed quickly! Use WD-40!
20. Gives a children's playground gym slide a shine for a super fast slide.
21. Lubricates gear shift and mower deck lever for ease of handling on riding mowers...
22. Rids kids rocking chairs and swings of squeaky noises.
23. Lubricates tracks in sticking home windows and makes them easier to open..
24. Spraying an umbrella stem makes it easier to open and close.
25. Restores and cleans padded leather dashboards in vehicles, as well as vinyl bumpers.
26. Restores and cleans roof racks on vehicles.
27. Lubricates and stops squeaks in electric fans
28. Lubricates wheel sprockets on tricycles, wagons, and bicycles for easy handling.
29. Lubricates fan belts on washers and dryers and keeps them running smoothly.
30. Keeps rust from forming on saws and saw blades, and other tools.
31. Removes splattered grease on stove.
32. Keeps bathroom mirror from fogging.
33. Lubricates prosthetic limbs.
34. Keeps pigeons off the balcony (they hate the smell).
35. Removes all traces of duct tape.
36. Folks even spray it on their arms, hands, and knees to relieve arthritis pain.
37. Florida's favorite use is: 'cleans and removes love bugs from grills and bumpers.'
38. The favorite use in the state of New York , WD-40 protects the Statue of Liberty from the elements.
39. WD-40 attracts fish. Spray a little on live bait or lures and you will be catching the big one in no time. Also, it's a lot cheaper than the chemical attractants that are made for just that purpose. Keep in mind though, using some chemical laced baits or lures for fishing are not allowed in some states.
40. Use it for fire ant bites. It takes the sting away immediately and stops the itch.
41. WD-40 is great for removing crayon from walls. Spray on the mark and wipe with a clean rag.
42. Also, if you've discovered that your teenage daughter has washed and dried a tube of lipstick with a load of laundry, saturate the lipstick spots with WD-40 and rewash. Presto! The lipstick is gone!
43. If you sprayed WD-40 on the distributor cap, it would displace the moisture and allow the car to start.


P.S. The basic ingredient is
FISH OIL.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Energy and Its Opposite by Judy Lyden


Every now and then, someone says to me, "You really need to slow down." It always makes me laugh and remember that high energy people are really fundamentally different from regular people.

This year, my wonderful and delightful grandson, William, has been despised by his second grade teacher because he is high energy. Now let me give you an insight into William. Yesterday, I bought his mother a couple of sets of new dishes. The dishes came in two boxes with many little boxes within. William took all the boxes and made a town from them. From one of the big boxes, he made a hotel complete with front desk and a bench for the Lego people he made to play in the hotels, and then a working elevator. He played with those boxes for three hours while his brothers lasted about one hour and two hours. And then, William dutifully put his creation away. William is seven. In school, this child deplores waiting for the next worksheet to arrive on his desk. He was once in trouble for taking his teacher's paperclips and making a necklace out of them. He was called a thief. This child is the first to bounce down the stairs and grip you with a hug and with his beautiful smile, thank you for coming and thank you for all that you do for him. Remember, this child is hated.

William is hated for the same reason I've been hated often in my life. It's the energy level that just never quits. It's a bank of energy that is rarely depleted, and that is a gig most people just can't keep up with.

Several times in my teaching career, a psychologist has graced my school to watch one of our children. Before this show even gets started, the shrink will invariably ask, "Do you think this child is a candidate for medication?" RED LIGHTS and SIRENS always go off in my mind like a tornado warning. "Why?" I coyly respond. They always look me like I am nuts. "If you want to medicate someone, why don't you medicate the complaining parent?" Pause. "Why would you take this child's energy level away?" The only response I have ever gotten is, "Well not everyone has this kind of energy, and it's not always desirable." Good God in heaven. Are people NUTS?

When people can't keep up, there are two responses: hate and emulation. I always say, if you like the business you see, emulate, but don't hate me because I have energy, and please don't hate my grandson because he was lucky enough to get a fuller dosage of life than most.

William Sheldon, a splendid scientist, spent his life working on something called Somatotypes. This work takes different body types and draws personality types to bodies. Most of us are three way splits between the Ectomorph, the Endomorph, and the Mezomorph. And each body type will engage different levels of energy and needs. The Ectomorph is least body driven type, quiet, restful, slow to move and slow to enter the game with a low intake of food; someone who is passive and pensive. The Endomorph is the happy type, often fleshy, round, soft and sweet, gregarious, outgoing and filled with a love of eating and experiencing the whole world through the senses. The last type is the Mezomorph who eats anything and great amounts to keep going - food as fuel - who simply goes for ever, who is strong, has a pain threshold to die for, and whose senses are limitedly appreciated by the desire for what's next.

When you combine the body types to energy levels, you get characters good enough to put into a novel.

As a classic hyperactive Mezomorph, I can't sit. Went to the opera ONCE. Felt as if I was being eaten by fire ants. Music is fine if it doesn't get in my way. Art is fine if it does something or can be used for something like teaching or a lesson in life. Reading during the day? Fire ants again. But when I do read, I can read anything in record time, about 2000 words a minute. Writing? I can turn out a five hundred page novel by getting up at 4:00 a.m. and writing 1.5 hours a day for a year. Did it eight times. So what, big deal.

But what does this mean? It means that energy belongs to some and not to others. It belongs to the hyperactive as a natural God given gift. It graces some people and is illusive in others, and for the hyperactive person, like me, and my grandson, and all my children, it is often an obstacle to others. That kind of energy is deplored in a world of what seems to us like it's going in slow motion.

When William sits in a classroom with the outdoors calling, with the world peppered with possibilities, with interesting people, with sights to see, with people to watch, with the sky bright with a heaven filled, he has to sit for what seems to be forever waiting for another really stupid piece of paper that needs his full attention. And because his interests lie outside that classroom, they, who seem to be lacking, want him "evaluated and tested" and ultimately put on drugs so that they, who seem to be lacking the energy to keep up with him, can relax and not have to put up with a child who's physically demanding and ultimately way ahead of them.

Often in my career, I have heard children who are poorly behaved called hyperactive. Ignorance of the hyperactive is just that - ignorance. Hyperactives are not generally poorly behaved, they are driven to do, to accomplish, to explore, to experience. When the care taking parent is not also possessing a high energy level, there is usually a conflict of bodies. One body wants to sit and be still, while another simply can't and will do absolutely anything not to sit still.

Hyperactivity is a gift. In its directed form you get characters like Davy Crockett, Theodore Roosevelt, Columbus, St. Paul, and many many more people too filled with energy to just passively sit by and watch the world do it. The world is not a hyperactive's entertainment unless they are playing full force. Not every hyperactive will do great things, and not every hyperactive will direct their energy toward great goals, and that's their own fault. But at the least, hyperactivity should not be hated for what it is, especially in a child.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Coming this Spring

cvb_cmyk.jpg

20th Annual Indiana Heritage Quilt Show

Workshop and quilt entries now being accepted.

BLOOMINGTON, IN – On March 3-5, 2011, the 20th annual Indiana Heritage Quilt Show will present quilting workshops led by well-known teachers, show over 200 quilts submitted from all over the world, and showcase special exhibits. One such exhibit is the Magical World of Mary Buvia, a once-in-a-lifetime exhibit showcasing the tremendous quilts of award-wining quilter Mary Buvia, many of which have never been publicly viewed before.

Other exhibits will also be on display, including the competition quilts which are eligible for over $15,000 in prize money. Quilts are judged in 10 categories by well known and respected judges. A new, non-prize winning category has been added this year for young quiltmakers (aged 16 or younger). All quilt entries must be submitted by February 7, 2011.

The Indiana Heritage Quilt Show is proud to host eight world renowned instructors who will present three full days of workshops and lectures. Displays of their work will also be available for viewing. Workshops are also available for quilters of all experience levels and cover a wide range of techniques. Each workshop is limited in size and fills up quickly with registration ending on February 11, 2011.

Other features of the 2011 Indiana Heritage Quilt Show include the Merchant’s Mall, book signings and additional quilt-related exhibits at area museums. For more information regarding workshops, entries and exhibits, visit the IHQS website at www.IHQS.org or call 812-391-0009.

2011 Show Dates/Hours Quilt Show Admission Fees

Thur/Fri, March 3-4 9am- 6pm Adult $7 per day or $15 for three days

Sat, March 5 9am- 5pm Youth (7-12) $2

6 and younger Free


Thursday, December 16, 2010

The Children We Love by Judy Lyden

As I sit here writing this, I pause to look out onto my frozen street. The trucker who lives next door told me at 5:30 this morning that the roads were "the worst scenario." He works in Louisville and drives back and forth. My cat slid across the frozen walkway this morning about 4:30 and made the news! As the schools began to call in this morning about 5:00, I debated whether I could get from my house to school safely. Probably not, so I made the decision about 5:30 to close school. I know it's a hardship for some parents, but is an accident worth it? And if someone was hurt because of a poor judgment, I think we would all be devastated. As age graces the human condition, people like me with a few years don't think invincible anymore, they think hospitals, ambulances, blood and wheelchairs...

Meanwhile, in the back of my mind I was mentally checking off what has been done, what still needs to be done, and what is not going to be done in my absence.

This has been a short Christmas Season because of the way Thanksgiving fell. Sometimes we have three weeks, and sometimes we have four. This is one of the three week seasons between Thanksgiving and Christmas. That means it all has to be accomplished between our return to school after Thanksgiving break and the last day of school before Christmas, which happens to be tomorrow!

So, knowing this, I made sure all the Thanksgiving stuff was put away quickly and Christmas started right on time. The list I have for Christmas includes a lot of extras. I always begin planning the days beginning in the morning. Of course our (Miss Amy and I) mornings begin before 6:00. By six, the coffee is made and the menus are discussed, and then it's time to clean the animals and get the paperwork changed etc. Miss Amy and I fill every second of that hour before the kids come in.

This year, Miss Amy and I decided to make a new cookie every day for the kids for snack. With Amy's good cheer and baking expertise, I added to her project by making post cards with the current recipe for parents to take as a Christmas gift this year. Since most of the cards have been taken, we think it was a good plan.

Decorations are important for the look of the school. This adds a lot of extra work, but it's fun for the kids. Decorations should mostly be children's things, so planning the art projects is a big part of the Christmas planning. But when? How much school time is spent on this, and what will the growth of the children be? If we incorporate art lessons, fine art, and listening skills, will this add to our academic program? It does.

I love the traditional stuff like the hand print reindeer antlers on the reindeer, but I also like non conventional things like the puzzle wreaths and the new Santa I designed with the doily beard. We made gingerbread men out of a new clay, poinsettias out of coffee filters, stars out of Popsicle sticks, and angels out of doilies, and painted Christmas cards. We made some outstanding stockings that Miss Nita and Miss Lisa designed with my addition of the lace pieces nobody could decide what to do with. The children sewed St. Nicholas shoes as well as these stockings and learned a craft along with making some really darling stockings. We made Christmas stars, bears, drawings and in fact, two things every day. I think the children did a remarkable job.

The tree, because of its size, is always a pain to put up. It takes a lot of our brown carpet space, so kids have to squeeze, but the tree is absolutely beautiful, so it's a go. But when? If it goes up too early, will we tire of it? If it goes up too late, will the excitement be lessened? So we pick the halfway point - end of the week ;-}

The race for the Santa Prize begins promptly the day we come back for Thanksgiving. This is an excellent way to squash the "crazies" during the three week wait to Christmas. This paper present on the string encourages children to be helpful, kind, attentive and considerate instead of raucous, mean, pushy and disobedient. It works. As the children gather their kind deeds, teachers must be observant, and rush to put up a paper present on the strings of children who do great things. Every day fifty copies must be made and cut to fill those strings.

Then there are the Advent Boxes for the best student every day. This box is filled with toys and candy and awarded to the child whose behavior was most beautiful and loving the day before. It was a joy to give out these boxes. Miss Nita filled them with lots of trinkets --- all needing to be bought and planned for.

The music is another important part of the Christmas Season. Every day we practice some of the old carols, and some of the new songs children love. This means teaching teaching teaching.

Reading and telling Christmas stories is another part of our Christmas Schedule. All of our teachers have been diligent in reading to our children.

When you're knee deep in messy projects, lunch is still an important part of the day. I go to 7:30 Mass on Sunday, and by 8:30, I'm drinking coffee and making out menus and grocery lists. By 12:30, I'm home from the store, groceries are delivered to school, animals fed and cleaned, and the usual jobs at school done. Every Sunday is a half work day, and it's worth it. We have enjoyed some outstanding meals the kids have really eaten well. Food is an investment in a child's life. We are missing a ginormous pork roast today with all the trimmings.

In addition to the Christmas planning, the weather has turned cold and there is still the coat, mitten and hat problem, the summer clothes issue, and the shoe issues that need to be addressed. We go out every day the wind chill is above 32 degrees. That means children need to wear coats and bring hats and mittens to school every day. They need to wear shoes that don't pop off every thirty seconds. When children walk into school on a 25 degree day wearing a sweatshirt and short sleeves, how do we send that child out to play? Children need hats in addition to coat hoods, and they need gloves that fit. And EVERY child needs to wear long sleeves EVERY day - it's winter.

Planning a Santa party means making sure parents buy a little wooden or unmarked gift for their own child and bring it to school in the distributed brown paper bags given out three weeks ago. Yesterday, we were sixteen gifts delinquent, so after school Miss Amy and I went out and bought some things just in case. It took us two minutes at Target to find wooden $1.00 toys. Children without gifts will be given flutes ;-}

And finally, tomorrow we will be taking the whole school to the Nutcracker Suite at the Victory Theatre. This is a priceless adventure and well worth the effort. Unfortunately, it comes on the Santa Day, but the effort is still worth it. Offering children a 1.5 hour ballet with all the trimmings makes a wonderful final tribute to our Christmas adventure.

The party will begin with the Children singing about 2:30. Parents are invited to sing. Santa will be at school at 3:00 and will distribute parent gifts to every child. The party is our last moment before school break. We will be out of school the week of December 20 - December 24.

As I look at my undecorated home, I ask myself is it all worth the effort, and I can truly say in a loud and enthusiastic voice, YES! Bringing to any child the joys of Christmas through my own experience and the experience of a loving staff makes this job wonderful and something well worth doing. These are experiences the children are not allowed to have in public schools.

I can say with a great deal of pride that we do a marvelous job at the GS filling in for loving parents during the day. Each one of our efforts toward the education of young children is something for parents to feel good about.

So what's next? Winter. There's a film festival, and a new look at science, and Miss Judy will be doing a big geography thing, and we'll be eating out as a group, and then there's the International Feast, and I still want to build the new corn box! This is our R&R time...sheesh.

This is just a little behind the scenes information for parents. We are all glad to do the best job we can for the children in our care.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Wacky Wonderful Wednesday

O x y m o r o n s

1.
Is it good if a vacuum really sucks?

2.
Why is the third hand on the watch called the second hand?

3.
If a word is misspelled in the dictionary, how would we ever know?

4.
If Webster wrote the first dictionary, where did he find the words?

5.
Why do we say something is out of whack? What is a whack?

6.
Why does "slow down" and "slow up" mean the same thing?

7.
Why does "fat chance" and "slim chance" mean the same thing?

8
. Why do "tug" boats push their barges?

9.
Why do we sing "Take me out to the ball game" when we are already there?

10.
Why are they called "stands" when they are made for sitting?

11.
Why is it called "after dark" when it really is "after light"?

12.
Doesn't "expecting the unexpected" make the unexpected expected?

13.
Why are a "wise man" and a "wise guy" opposites?

14.
Why do "overlook" and "oversee" mean opposite things?

15.
Why is "phonics" not spelled the way it sounds?

16.
If work is so terrific, why do they have to pay you to do it?

17.
If all the world is a stage, where is the audience sitting?

18.
If love is blind, why is lingerie so popular?

19.
If you are cross-eyed and have dyslexia, can you read all right?

20.
Why is bra singular and panties plural?

21.
Why do you press harder on the buttons of a remote control when you know the batteries are dead?

22.
Why do we put suits in garment bags and garments in a suitcase?

23.
How come abbreviated is such a long word?

24.
Why do we wash bath towels? Aren't we clean when we use them?

25.
Why doesn't glue stick to the inside of the bottle?

26.
Why do they call it a TV set when you only have one?

27.
Christmas - What other time of the year do you sit in front of a dead tree and eat candy out of your socks?




28. Why do we drive on a parkway and park on a driveway?
I dunno, why do we?


Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Calories


Many consumers do not understand calories, finds study

From Foodnavigatorusa.com

By Caroline Scott-Thomas, 10-Dec-2010

Related topics: The obesity problem, Financial & Industry

Many parents lack understanding of calories and some may think that they are a nutrition fad, according to new research from the Dietary Guidelines Alliance.

Balancing calories in with calories out has been a recurring message to consumers from health and nutrition professionals – as well as the food industry. However, this latest research found that only 14 percent of parents claim to consistently pay attention to how many calories their family consumes. And only nine percent said it would be the easiest thing for their family to do on a regular basis.

The Dietary Guidelines Alliance is a public-private coalition of health, nutrition, government and food industry organizations with the stated aim of providing practical advice on how to apply the Dietary Guidelines for Americans in consumers’ daily lives. Its three-phase research project took a representative sample of the population based on the US Census and included ethnographic research, focus groups and a quantitative message-testing web survey focused on topics similar to the areas of focus in the 2010 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee Report, the alliance said.

Marianne Smith Edge, senior vice president of Nutrition and Food Safety at the International Food Information Council Foundation, a Dietary Guidelines Alliance member organization, said: “Parents will soon hear lots more about managing calories from the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans to First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! campaign to various food labeling initiatives. This research helps us identify where gaps exist in communicating effective messages on dietary guidance to consumers.”

The research found that of five behaviors that could be used to improve families’ diets, monitoring calories was ranked as the least likely to make a difference, with only 52 percent agreeing that paying attention to calories is important.

On the other hand, 82 percent agreed that more frequently serving nutrient-rich foods such as whole grains, fruits, vegetables, lean meats and low-fat dairy was important for making their family’s diet healthier.

Nearly three-quarters (74 percent) thought balancing the amount of food and beverages consumed with amount of physical activity could have a positive impact on their family’s health; 69 percent agreed that paying attention to portion sizes could help; and 67 percent said that better management of higher-calorie food and beverage choices was important.


Comment: here is a fast food website for calories. My favorite fast food meal has 1125 calories and the same amount of salt. That's a whole day's food for me.

What people don't realize is how calories affect the body. Children need about 1800 calories a day. Is your child getting this much? If you break that down into meals, that's 400 calories for Breakfast, 600 for lunch and 600 for dinner and 200 for snack. Sound about right? A cup of milk has about 120 calories in it. You count them and see how your child does.





Monday, December 13, 2010

Tuesday December 14 th

We will have a two hour delay on Tuesday, December 14th. We will open at 9:00 A.M.

Monday's Tattler


Hoping everyone read the note sent home last week about tuning into WFIE for school closings.

Not sure how you are all faring, but my road has suddenly appeared in the past thirty minutes.

I am sure the children are enjoying the snow. It's a great activity for kids and not one they get all winter.

I was sure to buy the great sale they had at Target on sleds a couple of weeks ago to be sure that my grandboys did not have to "wish" for something to sled on when it did snow. It's so important to be timely about such matters.

If you "oopsed" about this, and still want your child to play, try a garbage can lid or even a roasting pan.

This week in school, we will be finishing up the traditional ornaments, sending things home, and getting ready for our visit from Santa on Friday. Please make sure you have your gift in for your children and all children who will attend the visit from Santa. Children w/o gifts will be given flutes. Do you know what it is like for a four year old to get a flute?

If you haven't and plan to, the family the school has adopted for Christmas still needs clothing for Dad. He wears a 3 XL shirt, a 44X34 pant and a size 13 shoe. Toys for their year old child are more than welcome. Please consider giving.

We will be out the week of 20-24. Tuition is still required. It is OK if you pay half this week and half when you return.

Please remember to dress your child in long sleeves. The children are chilly in the building when they wear summer clothes.

Please remember that children who are ill in the morning can not come to school. It is a State mandate that if your child requires OTC meds in the a.m., your child is probably incubating something. With Christmas only a few days off, please be considerate and keep your child home.

Our Christmas Party begins at 3:00 and will end at 4:00. We will sing Santa in, and then every child will receive a gift and we will visit and depart for our Christmas break. If you have any questions, please ask Miss Judy or Miss Amy.

Have a great rest of the week.

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Wacky Wonderful Wednesday


This is why we love children !

1) NUDITY
I was driving with my three young children one warm summer evening when a
woman in the convertible ahead of us stood up and waved. She was stark
naked! As I was reeling from the shock, I heard my 5-year-old shout from the
back seat, 'Mom, that lady isn't wearing a seat belt!'

2) OPINIONS
On the first day of school, a first-grader handed his teacher a note from
his mother. The note read, 'The opinions expressed by this child are not
necessarily those of his parents.'

3) KETCHUP
A woman was trying hard to get the ketchup out of the jar. During her
struggle the phone rang so she asked her 4-year-old daughter to answer the
phone. 'Mommy can't come to the phone to talk to you right now. She's
hitting the bottle.'

4) MORE NUDITY

A little boy got lost at the YMCA and found himself in the women's locker
room. When he was spotted, the room burst into shrieks, with ladies grabbing
towels and running for cover. The little boy watched in amazement and then
asked, 'What's the matter, haven't you ever seen a little boy before?'

5) POLICE # 1
While taking a routine vandalism report at an elementary school, I was
interrupted by a little girl about 6 years old. Looking up and down at my
uniform, she asked, 'Are you a cop? Yes,' I answered and continued writing
the report My mother said if I ever needed help I should ask the police. Is
that right?' 'Yes, that's right,' I told her. 'Well, then,' she said as she
extended her foot toward me, 'would you please tie my shoe?'

6) POLICE # 2
It was the end of the day when I parked my police van in front of the
station. As I gathered my equipment, my K-9 partner, Jake, was barking, and
I saw a little boy staring in at me. 'Is that a dog you got back there?' he
asked.
'It sure is,' I replied.
Puzzled, the boy looked at me and then towards the back of the van. Finally
he said, 'What'd he do?'

7) ELDERLY
While working for an organization that delivers lunches to elderly shut-ins,
I used to take my 4-year-old daughter on my afternoon rounds. She was
unfailingly intrigued by the various appliances of old age, particularly the
canes, walkers and wheelchairs... One day I found her staring at a pair of
false teeth soaking in a glass. As I braced myself for the inevitable
barrage of questions, she merely turned and whispered, 'The tooth fairy will
never believe this!'

8) DRESS-UP
A little girl was watching her parents dress for a party. When she saw her
dad donning his tuxedo, she warned, 'Daddy, you shouldn't wear that suit.'
'And why not, darling?'
'You know that it always gives you a headache the next morning.'

9) DEATH
While walking along the sidewalk in front of his church, our minister heard
the intoning of a prayer that nearly made his collar wilt. Apparently, his
5-year-old son and his playmates had found a dead robin. Feeling that proper
burial should be performed, they had secured a small box and cotton batting,
then dug a hole and made ready for the disposal of the deceased.
The minister's son was chosen to say the appropriate prayers and with
sonorous dignity intoned his version of what he thought his father always
said: 'Glory be unto the Faaather, and unto the Sonnn, and into the hole he
goooes.' (I want this line used at my funeral!) Â

10) SCHOOL
A little girl had just finished her first week of school. 'I'm just wasting
my time,' she said to her mother. 'I can't read, I can't write, and they
won't let me talk!'

11) BIBLE
A little boy opened the big family Bible. He was fascinated as he fingered
through the old pages. Suddenly, something fell out of the Bible. He picked
up the object and looked at it.. What he saw was an old leaf that had been
pressed in between the pages.

'Mama, look what I found,' the boy called out...
'What have you got there, dear?'
With astonishment in the young boy's voice, he answered, 'I think it's
Adam's underwear!'

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Tuesday's Teacher


From Education Week Magazine

Keeping Great Teachers in the Classroom


According to the United States Education Department, the country will need 1.6 million new teachers in the next five years. Yet a recent report by the nonprofit National Commission on Teaching and America's Future reports that “approximately a third of America’s new teachers leave teaching sometime during their first three years of teaching; almost half leave during the first five years. In many cases, keeping our schools supplied with qualified teachers is comparable to trying to fill a bucket with a huge hole in the bottom.”

With two-year alternative programs like Teach for America only able to fill part of the gap, the role of teacher retention in solving our massive recruitment task becomes a key question.

A new book by Katy Farber, Why Great Teachers Quit: And How We Might Stop the Exodus (Corwin), speaks powerfully to causes and cures for teacher attrition. It’s a book that is very much of the moment in contributing to the national education policy conversation. Farber wonders: What if we shrink the recruitment problem by stopping the hemorrhage?

In a recent speech in Arkansas, Education Secretary Arne Duncan said much the same thing:

"The Asia Society recently held an international symposium on teacher quality and they found that high-performing countries put much more energy into recruiting, preparing, and supporting good teachers—rather than on the back end by reducing attrition or firing weak teachers."

Duncan also sees a need to increase the quality of those recruited into the profession. Singapore, he noted in the same speech, "selects prospective teachers from the top third of the class and in Finland only one in 10 applicants is accepted into teacher preparation programs. They only pick the very best."

Unfortunately, high attrition rates work counter to improving the quality of the profession’s candidate pool. By increasing the scale of the problem, these rates make it more likely that we will need to lower standards for entry to the teaching profession.

The human tragedy of needless teacher attrition is striking. Many teachers spend years of their lives and tens of thousands of dollars on preparation for their careers. It is typical for new teachers to emerge with student loans that absorb 10 percent or more of meager starting salaries. The economic costs to society of people being educated for careers they quickly abandon are massive. It is an inefficiency of profound magnitude that we cannot afford as a nation at a time of economic crisis.

In Why Great Teachers Quit, Farber addresses three aspects of the problem: retaining new teachers who could become good; keeping good teachers who can yet become great; and, especially, helping great teachers want to stay in the profession they love. Based on interviews with hundreds of teachers nationwide, Farber’s book is an outstanding piece of qualitative research that goes well beyond simple analysis to offer practical, human scale solutions. Farber does not put forth massive program recommendations, but rather advocates multiple small converging solutions that can be implemented immediately by teachers, administrators, parents, school boards, and policy makers. The genius of the approach is that she replaces hand-wringing with practical action.

The book is divided into eight chapters, each addressing an aspect of the problem, such as standardized testing, working conditions, compensation, and the actions of administrators, parents and school boards. Each chapter follows a narrative structure that begins with a heart-wrenching anecdote of a teacher (usually a composite portrait) driven from, or on the verge of being driven from, the profession. From this dark beginning, Farber proceeds with an explication of the problem, suggestions for practical solutions that can be implemented quickly and inexpensively at multiple levels, and concludes each chapter with a message of hope.

A Practical Blueprint

I found myself asking after reading Farber’s book, what if the ESEA Blueprint took up some of her suggestions? What if Race to the Top gave points for states that established 30 minute duty-free lunches, regular bathroom breaks, and provisions for nursing mothers as the norm? What if voluntary standards for teacher working conditions and compensation analogous to the Common Core Standards were established—and adoption of these teacher standards was undertaken with equal urgency? What if states, municipalities, and LEAs received funding and recognition for adopting the “Precautionary Principle,” giving the benefit of the doubt in cases of building and environmental hazards? What if teachers were evaluated according to their own effort and achievement (which they can control) rather than that of others?

In a more general sense, what if politicians, policymakers, parents and the media consistently demonstrated respect for teachers in word and deed? What if teacher empowerment was encouraged in substantive ways under the research-supported principle that shared decisionmaking actually enhances administrative and policy effectiveness? What if teacher attrition rates received the same attention as student dropout rates?

Certainly, if these types of measures were adopted widely, relationships between teacher unions and all levels of government would become less adversarial, and teacher buy-in on the reauthorization of the ESEA would be more attainable, helping to retire NCLB with its raft of unintended and unwanted consequences. In addition the task of recruiting and retaining the millions of high quality teachers we need for America’s future would be easier, saving enormous amounts of money in education, retraining, and lost productivity.

Farber’s comment regarding duty-free lunch seems apropos here: “It seems like a small simple thing, but it is one issue in a fragile and highly built deck of cards.” The multiple, converging “small simple things” she suggests will make a profession in teaching less like a house of cards and more like a real career for smart, motivated and caring people.

In The Death and Life of the Great American School System, Diane Ravitch speaks of policymakers having a view from 20,000 feet. Why Great Teachers Quit brings the down-to-earth perspective of practitioners to the policy conversation and humanizes the quest, shrinking the distance between policy and practice. Farber’s book makes a practical contribution to solving real problems in education. Simultaneously tragic and hopeful, Farber’s book belongs in the hands of everyone who cares about the future of education.

Monday, December 06, 2010

Monday's Tattler




Good morning!

Time for anther Advent week at school.

Please remember to have children wear long sleeves now. It is too cold for short sleeves.

Children need coats, hats and mittens. We go outside every day that is above 32 degrees. Children should be able to handle their own coats. It's their homework!

We will be trimming the tree this Friday afternoon.

We will be stringing popcorn and cranberries on Thursday.

Please remember to take your cookie recipe cards.

Please take your child's work home with him every day.

Please encourage your child to pick up his toys at home so that he will be familiar with the job at school.

We do not let children run cars on tables. This is something to think about at home.

When speaking with your child, please have him answer you in full sentences. It is advisable to ask children what you have said, so that they can enter a real conversation. Many children are in the habit of not listening. This will be detrimental in Big School. It is the time to grasp their attention and demand it.

Have a great week!

Sunday, December 05, 2010

Sunday's Plate

Lots going on at school in the early Advent days. Lots of things you should know about like the race to the Santa Prize. Every Advent, we encourage the children to take care of one another. We explain a lot about charity and giving and doing for others. We talk about playing indoors and about order and cleaning up after ourselves and helping the little guys put things away. Then, as a tangible, we have something in the back of the school building called Santa Strings. Each child (who has an operative medal) has a Santa String. Every day, every child can earn lots of paper presents to go on his string. The child who has earned the most presents will receive the Santa Prize at the party on December 17th.

The whole point of this is to bring to the children's attention, that they are responsible for their play and also for children younger than they are. We are a group activity place, and the cohesion of the group is very important.

There is also an Advent Box, filled with goodies and presents, that goes to the best behaved child at the school on the day before. The kids LOVE this, and are always curious about their chances of getting the box.

We have and will continue to make candy a couple of times a week for those who behave themselves. Last week we made fudge, and this week we will make caramel.

Every morning, Miss Amy is trying out a new Christmas cookie for snack later in the day. We are making postcards for parents who would like to take home the recipes and make these wonderful cookies at home. The cards are issued every day, and you can find these on the front desk. Please take the cards you think your family would like.

A letter was sent home with your child about our Christmas party. We will be having a "Sing in Santa" party on December 17, at 3:00 p.m. Every child must have an accompanying adult. Every child in attendance must have a small gift. Please bring your gift to school in a brown paper bag with your child or children's names. These gifts are a secret and will be brought into the school by Santa. Please consider the weight of your gift.

Your gift should look as if it came from a workshop like blocks, a wooden puzzle, a rag doll, a stuffed toy, a wooden truck or car, a plain ball, or something with out a logo on it.

We will be going to the Nutcracker Suite on December 17 in the morning at the Victory Theatre.

More about this later.

If you have any questions, please see Miss Judy.

If you want to say something nice about the recipes, please see Miss Amy!

Tree trimming will commence on Friday. We will set up an enormous tree and deck it out in the p.m. on Friday.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Tuesday's Teacher

The Stranger


A while ago, my Dad met a stranger who was new to our small town. From the beginning, Dad was fascinated with this enchanting newcomer and soon invited him to live with our family. The stranger was quickly accepted and was around from then on.

As I grew up, I never questioned his place in my family. In my young mind, he had a special niche. My parents were complementary instructors: Mom taught me good from evil, and Dad taught me to obey. But the stranger...he was our storyteller. He would keep us spellbound for hours on end with adventures, mysteries and comedies.

If I wanted to know anything about politics, history or science, he always knew the answers about the past, understood the present and even seemed able to predict the future! He took my family to the first major league ball game. He made me laugh and he made me cry. The stranger never stopped talking, but Dad didn't seem to mind.

Sometimes, Mom would get up quietly while the rest of us were shushing each other to listen to what he had to say, and she would go to the kitchen for peace and quiet. (I wonder now if she ever prayed for the stranger to leave.)

Dad ruled our household with certain moral convictions, but the stranger never felt obligated to honor them.

Profanity, for example, was not allowed in our home... Not from us, our friends or any visitors. Our longtime visitor, however, got away with four-letter words that burned my ears and made my dad squirm and my mother blush. My Dad didn't permit the liberal use of alcohol. But the stranger encouraged us to try it on a regular basis. He made cigarettes look cool, cigars manly and pipes distinguished.


He talked freely (much too freely!) about sex. His comments were sometimes blatant, sometimes suggestive, and generally embarrassing.

I now know that my early concepts about relationships were influenced strongly by the stranger. Time after time, he opposed the values of my parents, yet he was seldom rebuked... And NEVER was asked to leave.

More than fifty years have passed since the stranger moved in with our family. He has blended right in and is not nearly as fascinating as he was at first. Still, if you could walk into my parents' den today, you would still find him sitting over in his corner, waiting for someone to listen to him talk and watch him draw his pictures.




His name?.... .. .



We just call him 'T.V.'


(Note: This should be required reading for every household!)

He has a wife now....We call her 'Computer.'

Their first child is "Cell Phone".

Second child "I Pod"

Monday, November 29, 2010

Monday's Tattler


Good morning and welcome back to school! We are beginning Advent this week. That's the long wait to Christmas. We will be making a Christmas ornament every day until Christmas. We are doing regular classes in the morning and a lot of crafts in the afternoon.

There will be some notes sent home today about two Christmas things we need to know about.

Every year we adopt an Aids family. This year our family is small - a mom, dad and child. We donate their Christmas.

The other thing we do is have a big Santa Party. This entails bringing a gift for your OWN child and ANY child who will be attending the party. The gift should be a "Santa's Workshop" toy - wooden or something without a logo. Do NOT wrap the gift, Do NOT tell your child. It's a secret. Please bring the gift in the bag that will be sent home.

More about these two projects later today.

We will be baking a new Christmas Cookie every day. If you would like the recipe, please let either Miss Amy know or Miss Judy.

Please take a look at the mittens at the front of the school. These are the best mittens for the kids. They are a perfect size and fit into small pockets and sleeves.

As the weather gets colder, children will need a hat and mittens or gloves. Coat hoods are not hats and will not protect ears from the cold.

Please send your child in long sleeves. Short sleeves are not warm enough for young children.

Have a great week!

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Saturday's New Book


Grandmother Remembers Holidays

An Album of Memories and Photos for My Grandchild

By Judith Levy

This adorable designed fill-in journal provides grandma with pages to record precious memories of holidays, birthday, vacation trips, and other family celebrations. Charming full-color illustrations and heartwarming verses enhance every holiday, with plenty of room for grandmother’s treasured photos! Grandmother Remembers Holidays is the perfect gift for a grandchild to receive from a beloved grandmother.

Beyond the Family Tree

A 21st-Century Guide to Exploring your Roots and Creating Connections

By Jennifer Worick

Whether you have a great relationship with your family or are separated by distance or differences, there is so much more to learn about one another. Here is a handbook on how to forge better family relationships by initiating more interesting conversations and creating an online means of communication. With more 1,000 insightful questions, Beyond the Family Tree helps the reader create dialogue during family gatherings or one-on-one get-togethers.

For a complete look at our year’s books, go to http://www.abramsbooks.com/catalogue.html


The Ugly Word Called Boredom by Judy Lyden


The Ugly Word Called Boredom

Boredom is a dangerous word for very young children. They should never have the opportunity to use the word nor even know what it means. Because boredom is really the inability to entertain the self. Boredom comes from within rather than without.

Being bored means a child has yet to develop a life of the mind. His imagination is flawed; he can’t make believe or invent without a great deal of hard work, and that’s an effort which seems beyond him.

Children who whine that they have nothing to do -- don’t. Watch them. They mill around without entering the play because they don’t know how. They don’t know what to do with blocks, with a play kitchen, a box of crayons, a puzzle, or nearly anything that takes effort.

Drifting or milling is passive and it’s easy. It means: “I don’t have to make a commitment.”

It comes as a result of not being expected to play -- without the help of parents or providers -- by parents and providers. It comes from laziness. Playing alone begins in infancy for short periods. By the time a child walks, his natural curiosity should be encouragement enough that he spends some time exploring his young world by himself. Children will still “home base” parent or provider, but the actual play will be self started by the child.

Preschoolers should be able to play for long periods without a participating adult. But this won’t happen if the tools of play aren’t available to the child both at home and at child care. It also won’t happen if parents play for children or use too much TV.

At the very least, any day care, preschool, or child care situation should provide enough play options, child focused activities and planned lessons designed to entertain and delight children the whole time they are in child care. Teachers should be on the ball enough to have planned at least for the day, and be enthusiastic about every child’s activities.

Now -- walk through your child care door and really look around. Does the warmth of color and things that belong to children, that they have made, welcome you? Lights on please! Toys out please! Noise shouldn’t deafen an adult, but a certain play noise should entice children to enter the games.

Cleanliness is next to Godliness. But so are children next to God, and their concept of clean and neat will differ from appearance conscience teachers and providers who fuss about cleaning up the mess. Mess belongs to child care. Best looking child care room award goes to the teacher who produces the most interested kids.

Do you see children who are idle? It should never happen. There should be at least a play station for every three children, and they should be well equipped, well thought out capturing a child’s imagination. This is where many children learn to play. How is taught by other children.

Lots of books please-- information, picture books, poetry, rhymes, stories, and toy catalogs. There should be a puzzle station, a table time toys station, a science corner with natural wonders, a dress up station, an art station with all the media and a block area.

A day care child’s day should be filled with learning and doing. It’s called hands on. If there is enough to do, children will never lose their way into that awful unmentionable thing called boredom.

Wednesday's Wonder

WATCH THAT DOGGY DOOR

Could you imagine coming home from work
to find this tiny creature napping on your
couch with your dog?

Guess who came home for dinner?

It followed this beagle home, right through
the doggy door. This happened in Maryland
recently. The owner came home to find the
visitor had made himself right at home...

This hit the 6 o'clock news big time.

[]
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Tuesday's Teacher

Soup is easy to eat; that’s why kids like it.

Soup is also one of the most nutritious foods because its liquid is contained and eaten.

Soup is easier than most people think to make.

Sounds like a quiz. It isn’t; it’s a trilogy of facts.

What constitutes soup?

The dictionary says soup is a liquid food made by boiling foods together. If you describe that to kids, they will pour it on the dog. Quite frankly, adults don’t have to tell kids anything about soup. For the most part, soup is friendly eating. Kids like soup.

It’s friendly to a child, perhaps, but not when the adult realizes that there isn’t enough nutrition in an ordinary can of soup to count as even a part of a meal. That fact can turn into a real guilt trip and that’s never friendly.

Cooking is the last thing on lots of busy parents schedules, but homemade soup is almost as easy as canned if you take a few short cuts, and it’s stocked full of quality food. I make soup every Saturday. It takes me fifteen minutes, and even my chef daughter has a bowl.

First step: put two or three cups of water in a two-quart pot.

Second step: put four tablespoons of chicken or beef bouillon in the water. Bouillon comes granulated now, has a shelf life better than snack cakes, and it can be used in lots of meals like macaroni and cheese for flavor.

Third step: go through the refrigerator and put all the leftovers from the last week into the pot. Add a little more water if necessary. Add some fresh or frozen vegetables if the left over section of your fridge is a little low.

What kinds of leftovers? Noodles, Chinese food, rice, stew, baked chicken (without bones) spaghetti and sauce, roast (cubed), vegetables, salad (with and without dressing, croutons etc) cheese, casseroles, cheese potatoes, macaroni and cheese, beans, tacos, barbecue, just about anything but tuna and sweet stuff because they will alter the pot too much.

Let it simmer until it begins to boil. Thicken if necessary, and serve.

I’m kidding, right? Nope. I’ve done it for years. My kids call it swamp soup. It’s a marvelous use of leftovers, and everyone likes it. It looks a lot like hearty minestrone. The mixed flavors are rich and hearty and pleasing to child and man. I once made five gallons and fed an army of picky teens. They ate the whole five gallons and never asked once what was in it.

The fun of swamp soup is the endless combinations that all come together to create something new and interesting. Salad dressing adds flavor as does melted cheese and mashed potatoes. But swamp soup is not for palate sissies whose personal menu could cover one side of a business card. It’s a hearty, robust meal that satisfies for hours.

For a child, serve soup in a teacup and saucer. Children will eat more of anything on small plates and in small bowls. Remember proportions. A dinner plate to a child is like a turkey platter to an adult. Add a fun bread or cracker. Try using a cookie cutter to cut bread or toast into fun shapes.

For mom and dad, add a cold top. Cut up raw onion, tomatoes, summer vegetables like squash, green pepper and cucumbers and sprinkle them on top just before serving with a layer of shredded cheese and bacon.

For refrigerators lacking in leftovers, try saving more from meals eaten out and save that tablespoon of this and that in a seal and close bag. Bottoms up!

Monday, November 22, 2010

Monday's Tattler


A nice slow week at school. We will be open on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. We will have regular classes on Monday and Tuesday, and on Wednesday, we will have a craft and baking day.

Today will be 70 degrees. Please keep that in mind.

Medals have been washed. We will be distributing them when they dry.

Tuesday, we will practice a Thanksgiving dinner menu with Turkey, stuffing, gravy, mashed and sweet potatoes, apples and cranberry sauce.

Have a safe and wonderful Thanksgiving Day.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Sunday's Plate


Here is an interesting idea I found on Cooking.com. It's a recipe for two potatoes - sweet and russet.

You either bake both potatoes in the traditional oven for 60-70 minutes, or you can nuke them in the microwave.

For two, it's just two potatoes, so the microwave makes sense, but if you're going to make this for a crowd, it's definitely an oven gig.

You bake both sweet and russet potatoes, and then you cut them long ways. You dig out half the potato in each casing without spoiling the skins. Mash both kinds of potatoes separately, mixing in your favorite extras like sour cream, onions, bacon, cheese. Put the mashed potatoes back into the skins filling half the casing with each potato.

Not only is this pretty, but it's nutritious. Reheat the potatoes if necessary - might add some grated cheese!

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Friday's Tattler


We had a great turnout for the play on Friday. The place was packed and we were so grateful to parents and grandparents for coming to the play and supporting the children. Lots of really nice snacks too!

The children were delightful. Early on Friday morning, about 9:00 - we ran through the play for the last time. The kids were great. Every line was crisp and clear. The inflection perfect, the lines delivered with vamp and style.

Then at play time, the kids were so busy looking out into the audience, they needed prompting, but it was still cute, and the children did a really nice job. The costumes were cute and the children handled them well. We were so proud.

August won the five pound candy bar as the fund raiser prize. We were glad to see it travel to a home. Teachers were getting itchy fingers! There is still plenty of time to sell the rest of your candy. This will help the school buy much needed playground equipment.

And so there it is - play done and it's on to Thanksgiving. Lots to be grateful for this year...