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Saturday, March 31, 2012

The best way for your children to learn software

If your local library has copies of CD- or DVD-based software tutorials, great. If not, a great tool is the Lynda web site. for $25 a month, your kids - third grade and older - can access hundreds of professional video tutorials on hundreds of different software programs on several subjects, from business (MS Office, Google Apps) to design, photography, video editing, 3D, web design, art, and more.

The videos range from 1 hour up to 23+ hour long, and go from basic to intermediate and advanced, broken down in chapters and segments. Each segment is a manageable few minutes long.

Most of the presenters are engaging and knowledgeable. I've watched five or more different courses, from Google Apps to Adobe InDesign, Illustrator, and Dreamweaver, even an Apple Server Implementation course. They were all great, much better than reading even the best book on the same topic.

If your children start watching three courses a year in third grade, by the time they finish high school, they will have gained mastery of many of the best software programs on the planet.


Great resource for fertility, pregnancy, and after birth



Making Babies by Shoshanna Easling is a great book for women that want to have children.

It takes women step by step all the way through the whole process, from the pre-pregnancy advice on how to prepare your body with healthy nutrients, to the pregnancy stage with herbs, tinctures, smoothies, salads, all kinds of recipes using organic, healthy, whole, possibly raw foods.

Shoshanna was pregnant while writing this book and making the excellent DVD set that can be purchased along with the book. I watched the DVDs. She's great, fun, very spontaneous and energetic, and loves working on all these delicious recipes.

Highly recommended if you want to have a very healthy pregnancy.

More Starfall, a great learning web site for chrildren

More Starfall is the premium version of the free Starfall.com web site. While the free version is a great resource for children 3 to 6 years old to learn their ABC and first reading lessons, More Starfall adds much more and is definitely worth the $35 a year they charge for it.

What do you get for $35 a year? A lot; you get a whole math section, with math songs, numbers, geometry and measurements, as well as lessons on addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.

You also get the full phonics and reading section available on the free version of Starfall, plus lessons on vowels, colors, more phonics lessons, word machines, a talking library with a great selection of books read by an adult while the books highlights the words being read.

For the older children who already know how to read, there's an "I'm Reading" section with a selection of books with rich graphics with reading exercises and hearing aid tools to confirm your reading skills.

Finally there's a Songs and Rhymes section with popular and richly-animated songs like "Head, shoulders, knees, and toes,""If you are happy and you know it," and many others that blend fun and learning in a smart way.

The beauty of the site is that it does not sacrifice education for fun. It does not distract the child with overly entertaining material (unlike the Sesame Street web site), but keeps her focused on the lesson at hand.

Once you purchase the premium version, you can authorize it on up to three computers.

Highly recommended.










Wednesday, March 28, 2012

If you want your kids to excel

Talent is overrated. What you need is hard work and dedication. At least this is the conclusion reached by Geoff Colvin in Talent is Overrated and by Malcom Gladwell in Outliers: The Story of Success. Both authors reach the counter-cultural conclusion that success, even for über-talents like Mozart or Tiger Woods was not just the result of genetic lottery or divine inspiration, but hard work for many, many years. Most people that master their field started at a very young age, between 3 and 6 years old.

If you want your kids to excel at a subject they like, dabbling with it is just not enough. They have to practice hard.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Signing Time: A great learning tool for toddlers



The Signing Time DVDs are great for children of any age; even our six-year old enjoys them; they are especially good for toddlers, however, because they don't go over their head and are fun to follow as toddlers learn to communicate what food they want or what toy they want to play with, and they do so by using simple signs in American Sign Language. These DVDs are very well done, with music, fun, adults and kids alike showing the signs in a way that makes them fun and easy to learn. Highly recommended.

Signinig Time