By Small Talk Speech Pathology

Tuesday, 31 January 2012

Free Printable Compliments Poster

love is in the air this month thanks to Valentines Day, so why not kick off February a day early and fill your home, classroom or office with these lovely free printable compliment posters courtesy of Kind Over Matter.

Download:

Free Compliments Poster PDF

Print as is or have your little ones come up with their own loving messages for their family or classmates with the blank version below


happy loving everyone

L xx

Friday, 27 January 2012

Painting With Wax on Rocks - Ideas for Outside Play

This post come  from the wonderful blog
pop over and take a look at the other wonderful outside play ideas they have.
Materials:

smooth rocks
cookie sheet
crayons (wrappers peeled off)
hot pad holders
a heat resistant cover for the table
oven

Directions:

1. Gather the smoothest rocks you can find and give them a good bath.
2. Put clean rocks on the cookie sheet and put in a 350 degree oven for 15 minutes. I’ve seen people put aluminum foil on the bottom of the cookie sheet, but this isn’t really necessary.


3. Peel crayons while you wait for the rocks to get hot.

4. Using a hot pad holder- CAREFULLY (HOT), place the rock on a heat resistant surface. Note- wax paper isn’t the best choice for this project.

5. Start melting the crayons on the rocks. It’s so pretty to watch the wax melt all over the rock. It’s more like painting with wax than coloring.
6. I kept the rocks waiting to be ”painted” in the hot oven to keep them hot while the girls worked on individual ones.
Warning- best for children 7 and up. Be careful of burning  fingers on the hot wax as well as the actual hot rock.

happy painting,
L

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Happy Trees - Ideas for Outside Play


The inspiration for this comes from

Little Page Turners' Happy Trees post!

Using leaves, flowers, grass & berries from their backyard, along with a few thumbtacks, they made their trees smile!


To target language while you play try focusing on nature naming words e.g.
- leaf, berry, grass, bark etc.
Or face naming words e.g.
- eyes, nose, mouth, eyebrows, cheeks etc.

For your older or more advanced children try comparing and contrasting e.g.
- the berry is like an eye because its small and round
- the grass isn't like a nose because it's too long and thin

Have fun everyone!

Love,
Lauren

Friday, 20 January 2012

Chinese New Year Activities for Kids

Chinese New Year is a wonderful celebration that we can all enjoy regardless of where we come from.  We have found a wonderful site with activities for your little ones to learn all about this ancient event that is celebrated all across Asia.  

 

What Is Chinese New Year?

Ref: Activity Village.co.uk

Chinese New Year is one of the most important holidays in Asia.  It is a time of feasting with the family, celebration, fireworks and gift-giving. It is a 15-day holiday beginning on the first day of a new moon and ending with the full moon on the day of the Lantern Festival.

The Chinese calendar is based on the lunar year, so the date of Chinese New Year changes every year. The Chinese calendar follows a 12-year pattern with each year named after an animal. There are various stories which explain this. The simplest is that Buddha (or the Jade Emperor) invited all of the animals to join him for a New Year celebration, but only 12 animals turned up. To reward the animals that did come, Buddha named a year after each of them in the order that they arrived, starting with the Rat, followed by the Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat (or Sheep), Monkey, Rooster, Dog and Pig.  Depending on the year you are born, you are believed to have the various character traits of that year's animal.

About Chinese New Year

Chinese New Year is a celebration of change ... out with the old and in with the new!

The events that occur during New Year’s Day can impact the rest of your year. Traditionally it is suggested that you be careful with your actions.  Greet people with joy. To ensure a prosperous and healthy year, you should stimulate positive energy flow at home and at work.

Everything associated with Chinese New Year's Day should represent good fortune.  Bright colours such as red, orange and gold are considered to be lucky. 

Chinese New Year activities

Please visit Activity Village for loads of Chinese New Year activities including stories, posters, colouring in pages, craft and puzzles.











Please click here  to access these wonderful resources with thanks to Activity Village

Happy Chinese New Year Everyone! 
Wishing you all the most prosperous year in 2012!
 
 
Love,
Vanessa & Lauren





Gender Stereotyping of Toys Through The Eyes of a Child.


Ten Tips for Helping Your Child Adjust to School

So she’s off to school every morning now, like a big kid.  But instead of the exuberance you expected, you find many days – especially Monday -- starting with tears, or maybe a tummy-ache.  Don’t worry, it’s not unusual for kids to need a little extra help adjusting to the start of school.  What can you do?
1.  Facilitate your child’s bonding with the teacher.  Kids need to transfer their attachment focus to their teacher to be ready to learn. If you notice that your child doesn’t feel good about his teacher, contact her immediately.  Just explain that he doesn’t seem to have settled in yet, and you hope she can make a special effort to reach out to him so he feels at home.  Any experienced teacher will understand and pay extra attention to him for a bit.
2. Facilitate bonding with the other kids. Kids need to feel bonded with at least one other child. Ask the teacher if she’s noticed who your child is hanging with.  Ask him which kids he’d like to invite over to play.  If he isn’t comfortable with how the other child would respond to a playdate invitation, you can always invite the mom with her kid for ice cream after school, or the entire family for Friday night dinner.  You don’t need anything fancier than pasta, and by the end of the meal, the kids will be racing around the house like long lost buddies.  And who knows?  Maybe you and the mom will hit it off.
3. Give your child a way to hold onto you during the day. For many kids, the biggest challenge is saying goodbye to you. Develop a parting ritual, such as a hug and a saying: “I love you, you love me, have a great day and I’ll see you at 3!”  Most kids like a laminated picture of the family in their pencil box.  Many also like a token for their pocket, such as a paper heart with a love note, or a pebble you found on the beach together.
4. Calm her fears.  Most school anxiety is caused by worries that adults might find silly, such as the fear that you’ll die or disappear while she’s at school. Point out that naturally people who love each other don’t like parting, but she’ll have fun, you’ll be absolutely fine, the school can always contact you, and your love is always with her even when you aren’t.  End every conversation with the reassurance “You know I ALWAYS come back” so she can repeat this mantra to herself if she worries.
5. Stay connected.  Make sure that every day after school you have special time with your big girl to hear all about her day, whether it’s a 3pm snack or a long snuggle after lights-out.
6. Be alert for signs about why your child is worried.  Most of the time, kids do fine after a few weeks.  But occasionally, their unhappiness indicates a more serious issue: he’s being bullied, or can’t see the blackboard, or doesn’t understand anything and is afraid to speak up.  Ask calm questions about his day, listen deeply, and reflect what he tells you so he’ll keep talking.  Start conversations by reading books about school together; your librarian can be helpful.  Offer your own positive school stories (“I was so nervous the first week I couldn’t even use the bathroom at school but then I met my best friend Maria and I loved first grade”) and the assurance that he’ll feel right at home soon.  If you sense a bigger issue that you can’t unearth, it’s time to call the teacher.
Photo: Sizumaru7. Ease the transition. If your child gets teary when you say goodbye, use your goodbye routine and reassure her that she’ll be fine and you’ll be waiting at the end of the day.  If she continues to have a hard time separating, see if the teacher can give her a special job every morning to ease the transition.
8. Make sure you’re a few minutes early to pick your child up.  Not seeing you immediately will exacerbate any anxieties.
9. Downplay the time younger kids spend with you at home. If a younger sibling is at home with you, be sure your older child knows how boring it is at home and how much the younger sib wishes she could go to big kids’ school. 
10. Create a calm household routine with early bedtimes and peaceful mornings.  If you have to wake your kids in the morning, they aren’t getting enough sleep. Kids who aren’t well-rested don’t have the internal resources to cope with goodbyes, much less the rigors of the school day.  Start moving bedtime earlier every night by having him read in bed before lights out, which also improves his reading.  And get yourself to bed early too, so you can deal calmly with the morning rush and get everyone off to a happy start.
Via Aha! Parenting

Have a wonderful last weekend of school holidays everyone!

Thursday, 19 January 2012

Understanding NAPLAN

Understanding Naplan Testing In Australian Schools

By Fiona Baker 
Ref:  Kidspot.com.au
Every year, students in years 3, 5, 7 and 9 in public and private schools around the country sit the same literacy and numeracy tests. It’s called NAPLAN – The National Assessment Program: Literacy and Numeracy. How important is NAPLAN testing for your child? Should parents get their kids tutored? Is it a true guide to how your child is performing?

Over three days in Term 2, students are tested on language conventions, writing, reading and numeracy. These are all then gathered up nationally and marked, with schools, and later parents, receiving the results usually around the end of Term 3.

The aim of these tests is to measure how Australian students and their schools are performing in the important areas of literacy and numeracy.

Parents receive a printed out sheet featuring several bands which mark where their child sits on the national achievement scale, what the average mark was, and where their school’s average was.
Its purposes are many – these are not meant to be only about individual student performances but also to enable schools to identify their own strengths and weaknesses and to provide an overview on how the curriculum is working nationally.

Should children be coached for NAPLAN?

No, according to Dr Debra Bateman, senior lecturer at Deakin University’s School of Education. Tutoring kids to do well in the NAPLAN defeats the purpose of it on many levels, because it would artificially inflate results and mask the areas of need in the student, the school and the curriculum.
All the official literature on NAPLAN also actively discourages the coaching of students before the tests. However, it does acknowledge the teachers will ensure students are prepared for the tests and will provide appropriate support and guidance.
You can access past tests at the NAPLAN website.

Why does NAPLAN matter?

NAPLAN testing is part of the federal government's moves to create a national curriculum and measure consistency between state-based education systems.

The results of every Australia school's NAPLAN tests are published on the MySchool website. The NAPLAN colour coding results on the MySchool website can be confusing, but the coloured strips above the smaller numbers in black shows whether the school identified is doing better, worse or about the same as schools statistically the same and all schools in general. Basically speaking, a chart on the MySchool website with lots of dark or light green bars is good, whereas a lot of pink and red bars is not such a good report of NAPLAN results.


Hopefully this information has helped everyone get their heads around the hot topic of NAPLAN!
Vanessa & Lauren