Dear Parents,

Black History is American History. So why aren’t our schools teaching it?

I grew up going to the ‘good schools.’

The ones with well-funded arts programs. The ones with computer labs, well-maintained facilities. The ones with teachers who had master’s degrees and decades of experience, who invested a lot of time in students.

In these good schools, the truth of American history was glossed over.

“Rosa Parks sat peacefully in the front of the bus. Martin Luther King, Jr. marched peacefully for civil rights. Slavery was bad, but not all slave owners (like our first Presidents) were bad. Everything is all good now.”

These good schools failed me.

It wasn’t until I took a Black History class in university that I learned what really happened.

I learned that the modern police system evolved from slave patrols.

I learned that voter suppression efforts began right after the 13th Amendment was ratified.

I learned how deadly the civil rights movement—which was always taught as non-violent and peaceful in these good schools—really was.

I learned about the Black Wall Street massacre—something I never learned before, not even in an honors US History class.

What was I taught, prior to college?

I was taught that slavery was bad, but not all slave owners were bad. How could they be, when they were our early Presidents?

I was taught that racism was fixed after the Civil War and during the civil rights movement. That Rosa Parks sat in a different seat and MLK Jr. marched peacefully, and everything was okay.

I was taught that we live in a world where race no longer mattered and that everything was equal.

My ‘good schools’ failed me. They failed us.

Will we allow them to fail our children?

It’s said that history is written by the winners—and it has. That history has continued to be taught by said winners. And the cost has been far too high.

American education needs to be overhauled as a whole, but we can start by teaching our children our nation’s history in its entirety. Children are aware of racial differences as young as 6 months and begin making decisions based on race as young as 2 1/2. If we continue teaching our children our history the way it had been written—by the White winners—then we are failing them to do better than we did.

The 1619 Project, the Pulitzer Prize-winning body of work, is slowly being adopted in the curriculum in Chicago, Washington D.C, and in Buffalo, NY. It should be incorporated in every school’s history curricula, nationwide.

This won’t be easy. There is a concerted, well-funded effort to block the 1619 Project’s inclusion in curriculums. One criticism is that “the curriculum is designed to inculcate in a new generation of workers a divisive racialist historical, and by extension political, worldview.

Isn’t that what’s happened already? By being unaware of the bloody struggle for citizenship and equality in America—which is still happening today—we have been inculcated in a false worldview of merit over race and class.

It’s on us to raise actively anti-racist children. That starts with what and how they learn.

The 1619 Project curriculum should be incorporated alongside existing US History curriculum, and our children should be given the opportunity to learn both and think critically about both.

It starts with one call, or one e-mail, to the principal:

“How are you incorporating the 1619 Project in the school’s history curriculum?”

If they say they are not, ask why. Reach out to other parents and have them ask why. Tell them that you’re not satisfied with the version of US history being taught to your children, and you expect—and pay for—more.

It’s on us to teach our kids better. This is where we can start.

Photo: Frank Mckenna on Unsplash

Hitha is a mom of two, New Yorker, CEO of Rhoshan Pharmaceueticals, author and investor in female founded businesses. To say she is a force is an understatement. Known widely for her popular daily round up of 5 smart reads on her must follow instagram https://www.instagram.com/hithapalepu/?hl=en

There’s a kind of amnesia that happens after giving birth—as the weeks pass, somehow the memories of the agony (and the tearing!) become muted, and we look back on it as something we can know was difficult without actually being able to remember how it almost literally ripped us apart.

Many parents are in a similar situation with distance learning right now. They can look back at last year and think “yup, that was hard…” without remembering how it almost literally ripped us apart as well.

Parents in Las Vegas are worried that Zoom-school is just around the corner, and for children in several counties in Georgia it’s already here, prompted by a sudden increase in COVID cases among students.

Are we going to do another semester of Zoom-school? Or maybe even another year (if infection rates remain high for the unvaccinated even after the vaccine is available for children)?

Can we make it through another semester (or year?!) of Zoom-school?

If you’re considering homeschooling instead, it’s really important to know that just because Zoom-school is at home, you’re not actually ‘homeschooling.’ 

Here are the top 5 ways that real homeschooling is more interesting, fun, and way less stressful than Zoom-school:

1. Your child doesn’t have to be on Zoom all day! While it might seem like you need Zoom-school to keep them occupied, if you have to continually bribe (or threaten) your child to do it, this is probably creating a good deal of angst for both you and your child.  When you take Zoom out of the equation you don’t have to coerce them into participating in learning any more, which frees up a lot of time and energy for more fun things…

2. In most locations, you can pretty much do whatever you want for homeschool. New York State has some of the most restrictive rules, requiring you to submit a notice of intent to homeschool, an annual plan for the year, compliance with instructional hours requirements, file quarterly reports with the school district, and test your child each year (or submit a narrative evaluation by a certified teacher).  

Several states (Oklahoma, Illinois, Indiana, and others) don’t even require that you let the district know you’ll homeschool; other places fall in between.

3. You can support your child’s social and emotional growth. Schools do nominally foster “Social and Emotional Learning” (SEL), but most often this is done with a purpose of making the child more compliant with the teacher’s need for a quiet classroom. At home, you can help them understand what’s happening in their bodies when they feel dysregulated, how they can calm themselves if they want to—and when it’s appropriate to be angry (e.g. when they witness injustice), how to express that.

And schools might seem like they provide a place where children from different backgrounds can mix but in reality, most children self-segregate by factors like age and race. But homeschooled children make connections with people based on shared interests like gardening (which connects my daughter to our retired neighbors as well as the Black and Indigenous managers of the local community garden) to form genuine friendships.

4. You can follow your child’s interests. We all learn most effectively when we follow our interests. I remember the first time I used the internet—I was looking for bus schedules and an hour later I was deep into the history of breadmaking. Links are amazing! 

In school, the curriculum is set by bureaucrats who have no connection to your child’s district, school, or life. Because of this, curriculum-based learning can never be truly responsive to our child’s interests—which is why we have to bribe them using grades, behavior management charts, and the threat of losing recess. Nobody wants to learn things that have no connection to what’s going on in their daily lives.

You can use a curriculum for homeschool but if you do, you’ll bring all the most difficult parts of school into your home, and you’ll lose time and energy for the stuff that’s really fun—like following the links from today’s interest to tomorrow’s fascination.

5. Your child will maintain their intrinsic love of learning. Young children have an intrinsic desire to learn—it’s how they achieve milestones like rolling over, walking, and talking. Research has shown that most children lose this love of learning in the first couple of years of school—instead of asking questions about how the world works, suddenly the only things they want to know are whether they have to do something, and how to do a task the teacher has asked them to do. 

When you aren’t coercing your child into spending hours each day doing something they don’t enjoy, they’re more likely to keep seeing learning as enjoyable. They’ll be driven to keep doing it for the sheer fun of it.

If you think that homeschooling might be right for your family but you’re still not sure (or you just want to hear more about the hard parts and not only the fun parts!), The Confident Homeschooler Short Course was designed for you. It has all the (research-based) information you need to make the right decision about homeschooling for your family, plus bonus interviews with experts (like a math tutor and the person who wrote the book on how to choose a curriculum, in case you do decide you want one) and with families who are homeschooling who want to help you avoid the same mistakes they made.  

And here’s a bonus tip: the decision to homeschool is never forever. You can change your mind and put your child back in school whenever you like if it doesn’t work out!

RELATED:
I Was Homeschooled as a Child. This Is What I Think about It Now
Homeschooling Resources for Parents

Jen Lumanlan fills the gaps in her parenting intuition through research, via a Master’s in Psychology (Child Development) and another in Education.  Her podcast, Your Parenting Mojo, provides rigorous yet accessible information on parenting and child development to help parents tame the overwhelm and raise resilient, thriving children.

For a plethora of reasons, kids need all the sleep they can get. But trying to get your littles to find the R&R they need can be a challenge for parents.

In a new study by Stanford Medicine, researchers found a simple and effective way that children can snag an extra hour of sleep. Published in The Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, the study found that at-risk children who participated in meditation gained more than an hour of sleep per night!

photo: iStock

So what did the meditation entail? Within the curriculum, more than 100 third and fifth-graders were trained to bring their attention to the present, practice yoga-based movements and learn exercise for deep breathing.

The coursework was taught twice a week for two years in elementary and middle schools within the study. Interestingly enough, despite the instructors not providing techniques to help sleep specifically, children within the study gained an average of 74 minutes of sleep per night.

While the results demonstrated a vast amount of data surrounding the topics of stress, meditation and sleep, the main takeaway is that the art of meditation can go a long way when it comes to preparing for bedtime. Not sure where to start? Check out this easy way to calm down before bedtime and these easy meditations for kids to get on your way to a peaceful bout of slumber.

To read all the important takeaways, you can read the entire study here.

––Karly Wood

 

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It’s cool to be kind. And it turns out, despite what you might hear in the news, Americans are pretty good at in general. So as you model kindness for your kids at home, check out this new data from Verizon and Kindness.org: a first-of-its-kind academic research study to find out the state of kindness in the U.S.

People in all 50 states took part in the survey and most (86%) said they’d donate part of their liver to a family member. Nearly three in four would lend money to a friend in financial crisis and more than half would donate their vacation time to a colleague.

The kindest things you can do for others? Respondents ranked becoming an organ donor for a family member, pulling someone from a burning car and adopting and raising a family member as the top three. Other popular measures of kindness include covering a work shift for a colleague, cheering up a family member or calling a friend to encourage them.

You and your family can get involved in Verizon’s “A Call For Kindness” campaign by signing an online pledge, downloading kindness cards and visiting murals with encouraging messages around the country. And if you’re looking for activities just for kids, Kindness.org has developed a whole K-8 curriculum that teaches students to Learn Kind, plus a series of easy-to-use activities.

—Sarah Shebek

Featured image: renebigelow via Pixabay

 

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Psst… Want to be a “cool mom”? Here’s a tip: Osmo is the hottest gaming/learning system on the market, and it’s worth all the hype and more. Osmo is an award-winning play system for iPad and Fire tablets—loved by kids, parents and educators around the world! It’s one-on-one interactive, so kids can focus, connect, learn and have a blast doing it. Numbers, math, letters, spelling, art—these games and kits have it all covered (and you can officially be off-duty as a teacher for a while.)

Just when we thought it couldn’t possibly get any better than this, Osmo introduces its new Math Wizard! Osmo’s Math Wizard is an active, engaging series that helps kids ages 6-8 get a better grasp on math—it’s a creative take on math curriculum-based content for first and second-graders. Rather than being put on the spot in a classroom setting, Math Wizard helps kids build confidence through self-paced gameplay and targeted hints to keep them on track. Even better: They don’t need your guidance because Osmo’s Math Wizard has your back with their kid-driven learning adventures. Read on to learn about their game boxes (two of them brand-spanking-new!) that will make learning math a fun and rewarding experience.

Shop the whole Osmo collection, including the Math Wizard Series, now!

Box 1: Math Wizard & The Magical Workshop

Imagination takes flight in this addition and subtraction adventure! Brew potions with dragon claws and magic sparkles to master place value on a mystical quest. Then, add and subtract balloons to help dragons fly! These magical games are meant to support first and second-grade math curriculum learning. Kids will learn to add and subtract up to 120, counting and place value and comparing numbers. It also comes with two extra digital games for kids to play, for a total of four games!

Box 2: Math Wizard & Secrets of the Dragons

Master measurement with Dragons! Explore the Dragon Reserve to discover the rarest of dragons, learning how to measure their growth as you feed them to become big and strong while completing your Dragon Guidebook. This mystical game is also meant to support first and second-grade math curriculum learning. Kids will learn how to use a ruler, how to use non-standard units to measure, estimating length and adding length.

Shop the whole Osmo collection, including the Math Wizard Series, now!

And now…drumroll, please…two new game boxes! Bonus: Each includes two mini-games that will keep your kid coming back for more problem-solving fun.

 

 *New* Box 3: Math Wizard & The Amazing Airships

Mini-Game 1: Amazing Airships

Build awesome airships to deliver packages all across Spellbarrow Port! Airships need to balance their lift with the combined weight of the packages, and the vessel in order to work. Build the airships on their mat and put them to the test in the skies of Spellbarrow Port. Collect tokens while the airship travels to its destination, and cash them in to purchase upgrades like decorations and magical trails. 

Just when you think you’ve got the hang of it, Captain Tiberius asks you to unload your cargo—use your math skills to re-calibrate your airship! Stages of the game become more and more challenging but like all Osmo games, kids go at their own pace, learning and having fun along the way.

Mini-Game 2: Clockwork

Get ready to guide a team of quirky clockwork robots through the skies of Spellbarrow Port. Use your finger and your counting skills to wind up your robots just the right amount and watch them go. As you explore, more and more robots will join your cause, each bringing their own unique abilities—whether it’s bashing through walls, hovering over gaps or walking upside down on the ceiling.

Each level has one or more magic crystals. Place your robot on a crystal, the robot powers on and you can wind it up. The more you wind up the robot, the farther it will travel. Count the number of spaces your robot needs to travel to the golden cog. As you progress in your journey, you’ll have to puzzle your way around levers, doors, springboards, traps and pitfalls to reach your goal.

What Kids Will Learn in This Bundle:

  • Reasoning Skills
  • Mental Math
  • Adding Multiple Numbers at Once
  • Strategy

Shop the whole Osmo collection, including the Math Wizard Series, now!

*New* Box 4: Math Wizard & The Enchanted World Games

Mini-Game 1: Bento Box 

In this game, you have to pack a magical lunch box. Players can choose from five different sports (including sprinting, pole vaulting, archery, swimming and wrestling) and help the athletes by feeding them the best combination of fruits. Add the points from the fruits you place to make the correct total. 

On some game levels, you can also help out the athletes with magical power-ups—the athletes of the Enchanted World Games depend on you! As you win medals, you can unlock more sports. Collect gems as you play the game, and spend them at the store to buy cool outfits in the Enchanted Store. Don’t forget to try the special power outfits - they give you super-boosts in the game!

Mini-Game 2: Juice Team

These elite teams are counting on the right blend of juice to win their trophies. It’s like Bento Box, but with teams! Add the superfood fruits to make a magical juice, using the right combination of numbers to reach the target. Players will learn to make the same number in different ways and will need to blend wisely for maximum results.

On special levels, you can play sporty mini-games to help your team to victory! Win trophies and unlock more sports like soccer, basketball, baseball and more. Once you’ve blended your way to victory, spend your hard-earned gems at the Enchanted Store to buy outfits for your team!

What Kid's Will Learn in This Bundle:

  • The Foundations of Multiplication

Shop the whole Osmo collection, including the Math Wizard Series, now!

 

 

 —Jamie Aderski

 

Have you ever had over 100+ Stem experts in your home? Cue the confetti: City of STEM, Greater LA’s biggest science program, officially kicks off with a virtual, free, all-online event Saturday, March 27th! This kick-off event has over 21 hours of content! With over 100 STEM partners including major museums, universities and STEM businesses, scientists, engineers and more, this event is not to be missed. This family-friendly event will have sessions focusing on Women in STEM, Emphasizing Green Energy and engineering solutions for a sustainable future. There is even a Spanish Language Channel to help deliver this curriculum to as much of LA as possible! Read on to learn more about this incredible event.

The Future of STEM: 100+ STEM experts in your home in one day—free online festival, check the website for YouTube streaming details. 

A Free Event Featuring the Hottest in Education: STEM

This free event is designed to help elevate access to the STEM curriculum, inspire the community to consider careers in STEM, and experience the rich resources available in Greater Los Angeles. The launch event provides an easy way for anyone and everyone to log on safely from home and get hours of science delivered to their living room! There will be a mix of topics, hands-on activities using simple at-home items, and amazing behind-the-scenes footage. All brought to you by experts that are living right in Los Angeles.

What Makes STEM So Special

STEM encompasses so many different career applications and unique ways to understand our world. It is also so crucial to the future of the city. Through this event, viewers will be able to gain exposure to exclusive experiences and ask questions LIVE to experts through the chat function. So, your young learner or budding scientist can have the benefit of not only direct instruction but also interactive experiences. 

 

The Future of STEM: 100+ STEM experts in your home in one day—free online festival, check the website for YouTube streaming details. 

 

Who Can Benefit?

This event is ideal for families with kids in grades K-12, and has programming in both English and Spanish. The program's goal is to create The Future of Stem in Los Angeles. City of Stem wants to inspire families to experience STEM, and maybe event consider a possible STEM career! There are no products to purchase, just experiences to enjoy. Education for many kids in greater LA has been challenging this year, and this free event is in an excellent way to encourage, educate and have fun with learning!

 

The Future of STEM: 100+ Stem experts in your home in one day—free online festival, check the website for YouTube streaming details. 

 

 

—Jamie Aderski

 

This past year has brought many challenges, but distance learning is definitely one of the biggest obstacles parents have faced. Two early childhood educators saw a need and created a resource to help fill the gaps. Joey School is a preschool subscription service that gives parents all the resources they need to teach their children at home.

preschool

Designed for children ages three to six, these subscription boxes have everything inside you need to guide your child through Joey School’s exciting and thematic hands-on curriculum. 

When you subscribe to Joey Box you will receive 12 months of preschool learning delivered right to your doorstep. What could be easier? 

Each box includes 30+ monthly activities and a featured monthly book. If you subscribe to the service, the first box also comes equipped with a supply pack which is then replenished in December,  March, June and September.

According to their blog, Ms. KT and Ms. Melanie said, “At Joey School, we understand the importance of early childhood education and its impact on the academic success of children long-term. We are here to support you and your child and provide a positive preschool experience within the walls of your own home.”

A Joey School subscription costs $99/month with a $150/month option for siblings. You also have the opportunity to order one box to try out the service. Additional supply packs cost $10.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Natalie from Pexels

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​​Today LEGO Education released two tech-free solutions for hands-on STEAM instructions in schools. LEGO Education BricQ Motion resources are introductory learning solutions that enable teachers and students to feel more confident in STEAM learning by removing digital barriers and teaching physical science through fun and engaging sports-themed lessons for grades K-8. BricQMotion offers two classroom sets: BricQ Motion Essential for ages 6+ and BricQ Motion Prime for ages 10+.

LEGO BricQ Motion

Through BricQ Motion, students experiment with forces, motion, and interactions in the context of sports, such as skiing, gymnastics, derby car racing, and more. The action-packed curriculum meets core science standards across grades, fosters creativity and develops engineering and math skills. 

LEGO BricQ Motion

Esben Stærk, president of LEGO Education, said: “Making learning engaging is more crucial than ever, and we are excited to bring two solutions to market that support teachers in the classroom and encourage students in the field of STEAM from a very young age. From understanding the cause and effect of push-pull forces via a tight rope walker balanced with weighted bricks to exploring Newton’s laws through land yachts and propeller cars, BricQ Motion was designed to engage even more students and teachers in the discovery of STEAM concepts.”

LEGO BricQ Motion

Designed for teachers by teachers, three curriculum units offer hours of educational content, as well as limitless possibilities with open-ended projects. Primary students plan and conduct investigations as they explore push and pull forces and observe patterns of motion, while secondary students apply their scientific inquiry skills based on an object’s force and mass. BricQ Motion also includes new elements to easily gather data (variables, angles, heights, and lengths) for analysis and synthesis, using visual math for a more creative, relevant, and fun way to learn.

Getting started is easy with teacher video guides, student videos and worksheets, assessment rubrics, tips to simplify or extend the lesson, and math and language arts extensions. Comprehensive professional development will be available for teachers to learn, practice, and master competencies to facilitate playful STEAM learning with confidence.

“I’ve used LEGO Education solutions for years, but I have colleagues who are nervous about diving into their technology rich solutions. BricQ Motion is perfect for them – it’s easy to get started, and without the technology aspect, adaptable to use with students whether it’s in-person, hybrid, or remote learning,” said Kristin Williams-Luthi, Science Instructional Coach at Gwinnett County Public Schools. “Even for experienced STEAM teachers like myself, I’m excited to get hands-on with BricQ Motion.”

LEGO BricQ Motion

In the U.S., BricQ Motion is available today for $99.95 per set at education.lego.com or as part of a Hybrid Learning Classroom Starter Pack that includes supplementary Personal Learning Kits. Flexible to use in classrooms and remote environments, the starter pack is designed to let students continue learning about forces, motion, and interactions no matter where the learning happens.

In other markets, BricQ Motion will be available for pre-order starting this month. You can contact your local sales representative or LEGO Education authorized reseller for complete pricing and availability.          

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of LEGO

 

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The pandemic has hit everyone hard, but trying to supplement schooling is definitely one of the biggest challenges parents have faced. Cara Zelas knows this challenge and she knows it well. A mother of tow, an educator and an entrepreneur, Cara saw a specific gap in the social-emotional learning critical to the preschool age and decided to do something about it. Enter, the Kindness Learning Company and The Big World of Little Dude’s school-in-a-box. Read on to find out how it can help your child and children in need thrive.

As Cara says, “When I arrived in the U.S. nearly a decade ago, I spent a lot of time teaching and assisting teachers in the classroom, and it was there that I had a stark reminder about the importance of themes such as kindness, empathy, courage and manners. When learning about the core curriculum and other standardized teaching platforms, I noticed a gap and these social and emotional themes largely missing. It was out of this realization that I formed the Kindness Learning Company and from there, developed our first book series, The Big World of Little Dude.”

The books aim at teaching the core principles of topics like kindness, empathy, respect, manners and feelings. But with COVID-19 closures, Cara knew she needed to do something more. So she partnered with ACS (children’s services), New Yorkers for Children (501c3), to create school-in-the-box curriculum that not only entertains kids, but offers them stimulation, learning and support. Plus, for every school-in-the-box purchased, she donates a box and curriculum to children in the care of ACS & NYFC.

Every school-in-the-box offers:
  • 50 individual items that correspond to Little Dude’s “At-Home Lessons” curriculum.
  • Neatly organized and compartmentalized materials to make teaching out-of-the-box easy and enjoyable.
  • Ideas and tips to ‘up-cycle’ the box for additional activities with your child.

Check out The Big World of Little Dude for an array of at-home lessons geared toward preschoolers, including the complete school-in-the-box series, all of Cara’s wonderful books, and a way to donate even more. Lesson range from $49 to $150 for the complete box. Remember, not only will you help your preschooler thrive, you also help another little one out there get the learning tools they need.

bigworldoflittledude.com 

—Amber Guetebier

All photos courtesy Cara Zelas

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Can you believe it? Sesame Street is about to launch its 51st season!

Tune in on Thur., Nov. 12 on HBO Max where the famed show is making its debut on the streaming platform. HBO Max will be airing 35 new episodes every Thursday and will head to PBS Kids in Fall 2021.

“This season debut on HBO Max marks another key moment in our partnership with WarnerMedia. We are grateful to them and our longstanding partners at PBS for their continued support as we work together to help children grow smarter, stronger, and kinder,” says Steve Youngwood, Sesame Workshop’s President of Media & Education and COO.

So what celebrities will be heading to Sesame Street? Keep your eyes peeled for Maggie Rogers (Nov. 19), Issa Rae (Dec. 10), Stephen and Ayesha Curry (Mar. 25), Billy Porter (Apr. 1), Kelsea Ballerini (Jun. 17) and Hailee Steinfeld. Steinfeld will also be debuting a new anthem, “I Wonder, What If, Let’s Try” on Thurs. Nov. 26 which will play throughout the season.

Season 51 is the start of a two-year curriculum that will focus on fun problem solving that helps build critical thinking skills so kids can solve problems in real life.

––Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of Sesame Street

 

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