Jump to content

Menu

ThatHomeschoolDad

Members
  • Posts

    1,515
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by ThatHomeschoolDad

  1. Having worked with high school kids with tortured grips, I saw teaching grip as a priority with DD. After trying a few different slide-on grips, we just hit on one that worked. Some will fit on crayons.

     

    Two lessons from our outstanding preschool teacher were 1. Work the major shoulder muscles by elevating an easel so kids have to reach up just a bit to write, and use a lot of clay and sand play to strengthen fingers. 2. Golf pencils! Those little stubby pencils are short enough to not be top heavy for a little hand. I got a boxfull on eBay.

  2. I can only speak to #1. DD tested as MG and was bored silly in public school K. We pulled her after that year. That being said, we know PG parents who make school work with large doses of afterschooling, but they do seem to share common complaints about continually having to push districts hard to get what they need.

     

    As for moving, I always meet new HSers who moved to our expensive part of NJ for the top rated schools and wound up pulling their kids out. I don't think there is a geographical panacea.

  3. I had a similar kitchen floor. Heat works, but go for something you don't have to hold in one tiny place as you do with a heat gun. Some use wallpaper steamers, which cover a bigger area. I like the Heat n Strip, which looks like a toaster oven heating element in a box with a kickstand. Heat one section, then move and scrape while the next section heats. You might be able to rent either one.

     

    Scrapers have to be sharp, and better ones can be had at real paint stores as opposed to home depot.

  4. I'd like to see universal, single payer, but there is a conundrum that seems present with my little bug (and perhaps others).  A HS friend with dual citizenship flew her daughter back to Ireland to have an appendectomy because even with the flights, she cam out ahead of staying here.  On the flip side, I know so many patients who come here because this is where the trials and treatments are for Stage IV OM patients.  I've had experimental things done that patients just can't get approval for in other countries.  Are existing single-payer countries pretty good at care up to, but not necessarily including the way-out-bleeding-edge stuff which is very expensive?  There must be comparative data out there.

     

    How about a streamlined FDA?  I can appreciate a randomized, double-blind study as much as the next guy, but the pipeline is so sloooooooooooooow, and I've seen treatments shot down for reasons that seemed more bureaucratic and financial than medical.

     

    How about tort reform?  Insane malpractice premiums keep new grads out of family practice and obstetrics.

     

    We also have a horrendous relationship with mental health care at all levels... Maybe because we're stuck in a mode of self-reliant cowboy individualism; maybe because of misleading portrayals of mental health in media; maybe because GPs with one semester of psych throw Prozac at patients like Tic Tacs; maybe because the brain is the only conscious organ that has to choose to seek treatment for itself.  Of all the possible changes, I'm most pessimistic about seeing any movement here.

  5. I think I kinda jumped the shark last year.  That's an Am. Girl Cadette outfit from eBay on the left, and a wiggly campfire on the right, made from a recycled PC fan blowing a fabric "flame" lit from below by LEDs.  The whole thing is supported by an old backpack frame.  It really looked nifty at night.

     

    Of course, what happened to Halloween, 2012 in much of NJ?  It was cancelled due to Sandy....Figures.  :glare:   

     

    Usually, DD needs to decide on a theme by Labor Day, so I can start scheming.  After last year, I think we're headed for some sort of woodland fairy just so we can re-use one of last spring's dance recital costumes.

     

    GStentFront.jpgGStentBack.JPG

  6. Our district even has it own special badges to earn (back of vest, but still cool). So, even if it ends up that we'll be going it alone one day, DD will still be able to interact with other Girl Scouts on the district level at least twice a month.

     

    DD's council went all out on a humongous five-section patch for the 100th anniversary.  Pretty nifty.

     

    I'd also recommend the GS HQ in NYC as a good trip.  Excellent GS museum there, plus one-on-one sessions about silver/gold awards, and a product focus group.  You can get special patches from the president and the CEO ("Eagle One"), plus patches that international visitors have left -- DD scored one from Girl Guides Australia. All back-of-the-vest stuff, but very unique.

     

    I'm thinking I may have to start sewing some on the inside of the vest soon, as there is little real estate left on back, and I'm contemplating a zip-in lining of some sort to hide the stitching.  The vest has to be double it's original weight already.

     

    Our council just set up a program to earn two UK Girl Guide badges, which sounds interesting.  I think those might be considered front of the vest.

  7. GS is like HS. You can join a troop like you can join a co-op, each with it's flavor, rules, etc. You can also do everhthing solo, joining other girls as the activities dictate. DD hikes the App Trail with one group, camps with another, and is raising $ for a Pax & Paris trip with a third. She's made friends through various workshops and events.

     

    It can be done well, and it can be wonderful.

  8. The major manufacturers do tend to go by a naming system, even when the names vary store to store.  For instance, a Serta "Allure" would be better than a Serta "Daphne"  (totally making up names, but A before D, etc, is the point).  Of course, that "Allure" in another store might be named "Allegra."   The letter-system is about as close as you can get to comparing one brand to another, or even comparing the same brand across retailers.

  9. We were pulling our little pop-up camper this summer in PA -- in left lane to pass a truck.  A car passes us on the LEFT, that is, one wheel on the grass median and one on the gravel.   AND he kicked up so much debris we got a nice crack in our windshield.  I thought we were going to be in a pursuit vid on YouTube, but he was all by his crazy self, with no one pursuing.

  10. I think we got a minor Verizon discount for DW being a teacher, but it wasn't much.  Verizon just switched their share plans to include one big bucket-o-minutes for all lines -- of course it's actually more expensive than the old unlimited plan I have, which will disappear as soon as I upgrade a phone.

     

    Maybe there are newer teacher incentives that make it a better deal.

  11. "Sustainable" has been a requirement for Bronze/Silver/Gold Award projects for some time and is a problem.  Essentially, a girl cannot complete a service project.  It has to continue AFTER she is gone.  IOW, she has to make up a project FOR SOMEONE ELSE TO DO.  (Who is going to empty those trash cans for the next 20 years?  Not her!)  This has led to organizations being unwilling to sponsor Gold Projects (yes, they have to be sponsored by an outside, nonprofit organization.)

     

    That this requirement has worked its way down to Journeys is an inhibiter to "girl accomplishment" of any service project.

     

    That was not our experience with DD's Bronze project, which involved running art sessions at the local family shelter.  She did several weekly sessions, and once it was done, it was done.  The project was approved by council.

  12. I was on cholesterol meds for a while up until my diagnosis almost 5 years ago, when I changed diet and exercised like a mad man. It worked, but I haven't maintained it since going to Stage IV - that does tend to alter one's priorities.

     

    I did have great luck using the New American Plate cookbook by the AICR. Their approach is really great.

×
×
  • Create New...