This may sound like common sense, but Canadian researchers have recently shown that kids who get flu shots help to protect others who haven’t been vaccinated.
Dr. Mark Loeb, a professor of pathology and molecular medicine at McMaster University says…
There is an additional benefit in immunizing children and adolescents in terms of reducing the spread of influenza in the community. It doesn’t only benefit them, but it will protect their grandparents and older people in the community as well.
Many kids aren’t aware of their potential at spreading germs. In the U.S., the seasonal flu kills around 36,000 people each year. If your kids haven’t gotten their flu shots yet, take them to your doctor or local pharmacy as soon as you can.
Let’s all do everyone else a favor by getting vaccinated.
Did your kids get their flu shots yet? Did they get the flu this year?
Kids Who Get Flu Shots Protect the Unvaccinated [Yahoo!]
Gever Tulley, founder of the Tinkering School, talks about 5 things you should let your kids do…even if those things are a little dangerous.
1. Play with Fire
2. Own a Pocket Knife
3. Throw a Spear
4. Deconstruct Appliances
5. Drive a Car
These activities will help your kids grow up to be creative, confident, and safe. Throwing, for example, stimulates various parts of the brain, and it will help your kids develop visualization, analytical, and physical skills.
Take a look at the video for Tulley’s short speech. What do you think of Tulley’s suggestions?
5 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Kids Do [TED]
Let’s get one thing straight: kids hate being yelled at. So it’s no wonder that your kids don’t listen to you when you yell at them to do things like clean their rooms.
If you want them to listen to you, cater your demands to what they want to do.
Take a look at these 6 steps from Modern Mom to get a better idea of how to do that… More »
If you’ve never had a pet in the family, the idea of kids and pets can be an attractive one.
But before you decide to get your kids that cute puppy or kitten, there are 3 main things you should keep in mind…
- Are the pets age-appropriate when it comes to children?
According to Anne Vasquez on SunSentinel.com, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) recommends smaller pets for children ages 3-5. If you’re going to get a larger animal, like a grown dog, make sure the animal is friendly towards kids.
- Pets can be teachers
A pet in the family is a great way for your kids to learn responsibility. Assign chores like feeding and socializing the animal. Quality time with pets will help your kids recognize trust, companionship, and compassion.
- Your current pet may not be used to a new bab
Pets need to get used to new additions to the family, too.
Do you have a pet? How do you kids get along with the pet?
Kids and Pets: What Parents Need to Consider [SunSentinel.com]
We at Just Parenting Advice recently published a blog that features Jamie Oliver’s TED speech. Oliver emphasized the importance of home-cooked foods as opposed to the fast food that is making so many kids today obese.
It’s important that kids learn how to cook at an early stage so that they don’t rely on eating out when they get older.
Here’s a list of snacks that your kids can make. These aren’t recipes for food; however, they have to start with foods that they can handle. And what kind of child can’t handle snacks and munchies? More »
Do your kids have something interesting to say about practically everything? Do you get a kick out of what they say, and do you think others will, too?
Maybe it’s time for your kids start their own blogs.
I think this is actually an interesting idea, and there’s an innocence in children that will bring fresh perspectives to topics that pertain to parenting and to the real world.
Before you set up that blog account, read this list of tips from Radical Parenting so that your kids’ blogging experience will be both fun and safe. More »
When I was younger I was in love with *NSYNC…you know, the boy band? I imagined myself getting married to one of the members. I needed their CDs, and just HAD to have their albums the same day they were released.
Thinking back, I probably didn’t NEED those music albums, although I certainly did want to be one of the first of my friends to buy their CDs…
Celebrities can really change the way your kids behave. You may find yourself asking, “Who are so-and-so and what have they done to my kids?”
Many kids go through their celebrity obsession stage. It’s not necessarily unhealthy behavior. It’s more amusing than anything.
Your young daughters may be in love with Justin Bieber, but so are all the other kids…so don’t worry about it. The phase will pass and you’ll be relieved of those songs that have been playing over and over and over again!
Who are your kids currently obsessed with?
Who Is Justin Bieber and What Has He Done With My Daughter? [Families.com]
Mark Bauerlein, an English professor at Emory University in Atlanta and author of The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future, believes that technology is to blame for the downfall of intelligence in today’s Generation Y.
Bauerlein argues that…
If you go into a room of strangers, you don’t know how to relate. You can’t replicate your IM habits. It closes people off from a wider engagement with the world.
On the other hand, director of the Center of Aging at University of California, Los Angeles believes that technology “teaches our brain a different way of processing things,” and that it’s not necessarily making us dumber.
I personally think that there are some disadvantages to technology, but the goods greatly outweigh the bads. Technological advances in the medical field, for example, are helping scientists expedite certain processes that used to take weeks or months.
What do you think? Is technology making us dumber?
‘Dumbest Generation’? Professor Blames Technology [USA Today]
Jamie Oliver won the 2010 Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) award with his vision that diet habits in kids can be changed in the home and at school.
I wish for everyone to help create a strong, sustainable movement to educate every child about food, inspire families to cook again and empower people everywhere to fight obesity.
Diet-related diseases are the biggest killers in the U.S. today. But these diseases are entirely preventable, as Oliver repeats in his talk over and over again.
In watching the video below, you will learn…
- How often Americans die as a result of the food they eat
- How much children’s lives are shortened by diet habits
- How to teach kids about food at home and in schools.
Oliver believes that we are all capable of making real, tangible change in the way we feed our children. Do you believe?
Watch the video and tell us what you think!
Jamie Oliver’s TED Talk: How We’re Killing Our Kids With Bad Food [Barking Robot]
Teaching independence is difficult without allowing your teens to experience that independence themselves. It’s also difficult because you can’t just kick your teens out of the house for the purpose of teaching them how to be independent.
In his book, 1001 Things Every Teen Should Know Before They Leave Home: (Or Else They’ll Come Back), Harry H. Harrison, Jr. presents you with some things you should teach your teens.
Here are some examples of what your teens should know… More »