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Welcome 2012!

2012 will be my family's year of the Jubilee.

 "For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD,

“plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."

Jeremiah 29:11

 

I hope 2012 will be a good one for you too. Happy New Year!

Oh please, mom!

This evening while before I left Kyle alone in the hall to watch his TV while I went to take my bath.

Mom : Kyle, Mummy is going to take my bath. So call daddy if u need any help (hb was in the study)

Kyle : Ok.

Mom : Don't do anything strange ok?

Kyle : (Looks at me quizzically) Like what?

Mom : Umm…ah…like maybe open the balcony door and jump down or something.

Can't blame me for being so specific and quite inane. We live on the 2nd floor and there are no grills in our balcony and I just needed to make sure that he will be alright by himself for a while.

Kyle : (Looked up at me and rolled his eyes)

Now he is definitely growing up too fast…he actually rolled his eyes at me!

Don't they like do that only when they reach their teenage years?

There more to just learning how to read

Having a website on home-learning with kids made me realise how much focus parents place on certain areas when it comes to educating a child.

When we write about topics on general education; e.g., learning how to read (especially), the page views are all time high. Even topics of Math learning are less of interest versus articles about learning how to read.

Is learning how to read the panacea to educating a child? Hearing from a perpective from a middle aged lady with grown up children (my mom), she thinks that the child will be able to learn everything once they can read. Not to be-little her knowledge or her attitude towards child rearing, but I beg to differ.

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Recently K surprised me by reading out the word 'GO' on a road sign. I have been teaching him the alphabetic principle and he knows almost 75% of the alphabet sounds, and somehow, something clicked in his understanding of how letters blend together to make words. He is showing signs of reading readiness and probably some parents in this situation might plan a full curriculum at home to ensure that he is exposed to sight words and will give him lots of new letters to learn and blend. Or maybe even reading the same books repeatedly and daily so that he will soon be able to read a 32 page book aloud by himself.

Am I not excited discover this development or motivated to hasten the progress? Indeed I am pleased to see some 'fruits' of my labour in my home-learning with him, but nothing much has changed. I still plan to take it at snail's pace, ensuring that he thoroughly enjoys the learning the remaining 25% of the alphabet sounds, read lots of new books every other week, play lots of learning games and have still plenty of time for free play. In reality, we spend less than 1.5 hours a week (cumulative) on home-learning.

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Some might think that this almost like mis-representation for someone who has a home-learning site. Shouldn't home-learning be done on a daily basis to ensure that the child acquires the learning? For a young child, learning sessions are best managed within 15-30 minutes each time and will be most effective when it is child-led. In other words, K needs to be in the mood to do the learning activities, and his interest and learning is most effectively acquired when he is the one that initiates the activity.

I place his learning activities in file drawers in his room, and he helps himself to the activities whenever he feels like playing with the 'games'. For K, all these learning activities are games and not work. Every once in a while, when I feel that I need to allocate some free play time to learning, that's when I will initiate for him to do some activities with me. So far, this method works brilliantly for K. 

There is really so much more than to learning how to read. Reading is just a small part of educating a whole child.

We have started listening to Bach in the car, will then slowly progress to Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikowsky, Handel and Debussy. Read books on how honesty is important, how helpfulness is a virtue, learning how to respect others and himself, share and develop self-control. We are exploring new mediums to use in art, spending less time in craft. His art is still looking like multi-colored large blob plus lots of squiggles, and I have to make a point to remind myself that is the process and not the product that matters.

We will be resuming our nature walks on Saturday mornings, going for more excursions and spending more time talking about the wonders of God's creation, as well as our Creator's unrelenting love for us. Spend a more time dabbling in science experiments, training him to dawdle a little less and help around the house a little more. Reading books and more books on new concepts, countries, people of different cultures and creating lapbooks to accompany the books.

He can't read a 32 page book by himself (regardless of whether it is a brand new book or a book that he has seen countless of times). Neither can he read a simple sentence, as the only word he can read at this moment is 'Go'. He can't count to 100 either, in fact, not even 11-20 without getting the numbers mixed up. But he can recognise rhyme, knows the beginning sounds to words, knows spatial relationships, classification, patterning and one-to-one correspondence, and progressively, more concepts. Nonetheless, I am certain that he is having lots of fun doing all of that.

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He can hit the golf ball fairly well with his golf clubs and manage a simple tennis volley with his grand-dad. Sports is still an area where I have yet to determine if it is his gift or just advanced motor skills, but I will be making sure that he will be spending a little more time in that area to ensure that he does not grow to become a pudgy 6 year old. 

Is there a need for haste when we can both enjoy the bonding and the joy that learning can bring?

This post will serve as a reminder that I should never be caught up in societal expectations or be swayed by what everyone else is doing with their kids.

Christmas with the family

Christmas has always been a really special time of the year for the family. xmas1 We get to spend time with one another,

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Share, chat and enjoy a feast. xmas4

Simply appreciating time together with the family. Having fun,

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giving and caring,

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a celebration for the heart.

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Christmas is not wonderful because of the pleasant surprises…

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Every Christmas song, every lit candle, every wrapped gift reminds me that this is the season of my Saviour’s birth.

“‘They shall call His name Immanuel,’ translated as, ‘God with us.’” (Matthew 1:23)

 

Here’s wishing all friends a Blessed Christmas!

Ready, set, Bake! – Pistachio Cookies

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Our bake fest has begun!

I recently got this book, 1001 Cupcakes, Cakes and other tempting treats from the Borders sale (30% off for Borders members) and this is the first recipe that K and I have baked; Pistachio cookies. I am planning to bake at least one to two recipes a week from this book, and possibly more leading up to Christmas.

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An easy and scrumptious bake, here’s the recipe:

Pistachio cookies copy

Food for thought

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The list of things that K eats now is getting shorter and shorter. For this season it has been only

- chicken marcaroni

- spaghetti

- lasagne

- fishball noodles (he will eat this everyday if I allowed it!)

- prawn noodles (without the prawn, only with the fishcake)

- fried rice (only when it is home-cooked)

- ban mian

- yong tau foo (with all the fish balls/cake, without the tau foo)

- rice (only when he gets to eat it with fish ball)

- Japanese ramen

- cake and cupcakes

- an occasional piece of vegetable

I got this book, “Why should I eat well?”, to teach K the importance of eating well. He can now tell me when I ask “Why must you eat well?” His reply will be “So that no pimples…no tooth decay.”

He is rather disturbed by the visuals of the pimply kid in the book and have refused to look at the book now, after reading it a couple of times. This evening while I was washing my face, K came into the bathroom and we had this conversation -

K : “Why mummy washing face?”

Me : “I need to keep my face clean so that I will not get pimples.”

K : “Why mummy got pimple?” (referring to the hormonal zit that I have been nursing)

Me : “Because mommy has not been eating well. So did you eat well tonight?”

K : “No.” (He refused to eat his rice this evening and ended up picking on a piece of ham in a sandwich)

Me : “So tomorrow you might get pimples then.”

K : “NOoooooo!!!” (he then scrambled out of the bathroom)

I felt quite guilty after hearing that distraught tone in his “No”. I try not to use fear to manage him, but sometimes, I just can’t help it. Plus, I hate to admit that it works quite well most of the time.

I have decided that once he turns 4, he will need to eat whatever he is given or he can choose to go hungry. Then be made to watch videos and images of starving Ethopian/Somalian children. And listen to a lengthy discourse about how fortunate he is compared to these children who have nothing to eat.

So I have it all carefully thought out for when he is 4, and still wants to play ‘hardball’ with me during meal times. Although, I am well aware that theory always sounds much easier than practical experience.

Haircut milestone for Mr. 27 month old

K went for his ‘long-dreaded’ (if there is a word as long-awaited, this is the opposite) haircut on friday. The past few haircut experiences for K have been very painful for him and I, especially since he will emerge from every single haircut all upset and tearful.

This time my helper and I were in for a pleasant surprise. As my helper stood at the side, looking very apprehensive, since most of the previous haircuts K will be on her lap and I will be the one restraining the hands and trying to calm him down. The both of us weren’t sure what was in store for us this time…

K asked to sit on the chair by himself, requested for “Thomas” to be played on the screen in front of him and sat calmly through the whole haircut without any resistance. He grinned widely and exclaimed “Ah!” when he saw his new hairstyle in the mirror, right after when the stylist styled his fringe and said “Finished!”

Like any proud parent, I gushed over him after the haircut and was extremely enthusiastic to get him a new puzzle and ball from the toy shop afterwards.

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K looking cool with his new hairstyle

Pentecost mood

This summarizes my mood for this weekend.

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Patiently awaiting; ears alert for the trumpet sound.

Parenting

Children are a joy.
Only when I experience the frustrations of dissension every once a while
Then I know how to appreciate the simple, yet profound joy they bring.

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All your children shall be taught by the Lord,and great shall be the peace of your children.
Isaiah 54:13

Go Fish!

After numerous experiences of mock fishing with Grand-dad’s fishing rod at his house, K could not wait to do real fishing at the pond. It was tough to convince him that he will not be able to catch any fish, as he kept reeling the line in…which is his favorite part of the activity.

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http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=4678476&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=0&show_portrait=0&color=00ADEF&fullscreen=1

Fishing from Rachel T on Vimeo.

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