Thursday, November 5, 2015

Playing Together

Many families today are single child families, unlike earlier times, when families were mostly larger and siblings ranged from teenagers to young tots. There are definite pluses in having smaller families, for kids can have more resources, and time from their parents and caretakers. But, there is the loss of warmth and bustle of large families, which can act as safety nets in times of crises. Most importantly the biggest plus of a large family is this - kids grow up with siblings who double up as playmates. Therefore as the size of the family shrinks, the importance of play cannot be overemphasized.

Importance of Play
Play is a basic human right according to the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights. In spite of understanding this important aspect of development in children, the time and opportunity for explorative play, available for modern day children is shrinking. This leads to higher levels of anxiety and stress among children.

What we think of as play is actually how our babies are learning. With their creativity flourishing, they along with their playmates and adult caregivers, learn to create worlds, where they learn to overcome their fears and develop their understanding. They learn to recognize faces, voices, things, feeling and communicate back. With physical play, their bodies grow tall and strong, creating a good space for their intellectual development. This in turn happens via play which stimulates the brain. Play at home, on playdates, at the park or while holidaying - never underestimate it's value. 

Playing with Parents
A child's first playmate is the primary caregiver, which is invariably a mother. A child traditionally accompanied the mother wherever she went, or the child stayed behind with some other responsible adult. Children like being spoken to and playing with their parents. Even though it might seem one sided, when they are too young to speak, it's a fact that they are listening, which is how they actually learn to speak. In fact a mother's voice can actually calm a distressed baby. They learn to recognize tones and looks and react accordingly. All this learning is only through play.

Playing with other Kids



Play can be joyful, and when play happens with friends, the joy is boundless. As kids grow, they need to play with other kids. This teaches them cooperation, sharing and empathy. Children must play with other children, to learn and understand peer behavior. This will help them build friendships, bond and learn to negotiate the world they live in. Over the years when children grow into adults and go on to take our place in the world, most of their learning happens through play without their even realizing that they are learning. 

Playing in Nature
Nature is a great teacher. Spending time in nature and spending time with fellow creatures, helps kids understand the importance of interdependence in Nature. Pet games on digital devices are great, but nothing can beat the rough lick of a dog, or the warm furry body of a kitten curled up in your lap. Parents must inculcate the habit of playing outside, enjoying a trek, observing nature and the appreciation of beauty and balance in nature. 

To conclude, play is important for the well rounded development of a child. As parents and caregivers, it is our responsibility to ensure that our kids have safe spaces and opportunities to play. 

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

5 Sites to Know More About Games and Apps

Sometimes I need a quick online reference for a game. Maybe a rating, a review or just some plain vanilla information about it. There are a lot of people out there who enjoy reviewing apps and sharing it with folks like us who need the reviews. Thanks everybody for the great work!



Here's a list of 5 of my favorites:

1. Commonsense Media
This is a good place to find a review for a book, an app or even a movie. They rate using stars, and along with it also rate the educational value, ease of use, consumerism and violence. Their tagline actually explains best  - we rate, educate, and advocate for kids, families, and schools

2. Best Kids Apps
Primarily an app review site useful for parents who are not into gaming, they cover iPhone, iPad and Android apps. Reviews are bunched by age appropriateness, apart from being educational, bestsellers or Free. The App developer is also mentioned.

3. The iPhone Mom
You can find app review even if they are not on an iPhone. Along with a review there is usually some contribution from her kids. What I like best is a link to the app developer's site a link to the iTunes store. Typically reviews are grouped by age and screenshots are included.

4. Cool Mom Tech
Two moms dish out common sense about technology. They don't just cover apps, but a whole bunch of other things related to technology(That's fun to read to and a lot of it is very useful)

5. Gamer Dad
The tagline 'Gaming with my kids since 2003' perhaps says all that I need. He writes extensively about video games, violence in gaming and the effect of it on children.

Well, I gather information from these sites. Where do you gather your gaming information from?

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

9 fun things to do this Grandparents Day

Come September, and it's Grandparents Day - a day cherished by both grandparents and grandkids. The first Sunday of September after Labor Day of each year has been 'National Grandparents' Day', since 1978, and it's purpose is "...to honor grandparents, to give grandparents an opportunity to show love for their children's children, and to help children become aware of strength, information, and guidance older people can offer".


This Grandparents Day, here are 9 things grandkids of all ages could try:

1. As a run up to the day, grandkids can make simple countdown cards with messages like...3 days left, 2 to go and 1 day more.

2. Plan a nice day for the grandparents. If both you and your kids have grandparents, make it a double date. Four generations can celebrate this Grandparents Day. Memories formed across generations can be rich or sparse depending on the age and intensity of the memory. If children are older, they will cherish a memory of their great grandparents too.

3. Make a photo collage for your grandparents. Source images from their relatives and friends. Raid old photo albums. Put it all together and they will love it. It could be a wall hanging, a standalone on a desk or maybe printed on canvas.

4. Make a home cooked meal and invite them over. Introduce them to pet games, which are a rage among kids and older people. Perhaps the grandkids and grandparents can adopt pets together and nurture them.

5. Take them on a trip. If they have relatives they might like to visit, take them visiting. Or perhaps
take them out on a picnic to some place they have not gone in some years. If they had taken you there as a young child, take them back there on a nostalgia trip.

6. Give them a surprise party, by inviting over their friends and extended family.

7. If your parents cannot drive, but they would like to take your kids out to a show or even a short holiday, help them organize it. Keep in mind that holidaying with kids is not easy and that you might have to organize a trip keeping the age of both your kids and parents in mind.

8. If you want to buy them a nice gift, a tablet is a great one. Older people take to them quite well. Introduce them to games and you will soon see them scoring high scores!

9. Spend the day together at home. Just this is good as it makes them feel wanted and loved. Look at old picture, listen to old stories, eat some good food, and hear some vintage family stories.


You still have a few days for Grandparents Day. Plan it well and have a great day. Do let us know what you did!

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Keeping your Kids Occupied this Summer – 4 Interesting Home-based Activities

Summer break is a great time to bond with the kids and let your own inner child peek out occasionally. But too much leisure can produce mind-numbing boredom and turn your little angels into tantrum-throwing ogres. Here are four fun activities guaranteed to keep the kids out of trouble and definitely out of your hair this summer. Feel free to add them to your parenting arsenal.


Go for a nature walk – To add spice to your nature walk, add a theme or goal and stick to it. For instance, you could go to the beach and collect stones and shells to make an art object out of it later. In the forest, invite them to collect at least five varieties of flowers, bugs, plants or leaves. Give them a plan and a purpose so they don’t get bored too quickly.

Play online kids’ games – A simple google search will bring up scores of quality educational websites that offer fun learning games designed to keep kids productively engaged through play. Online learning games cover a variety of subjects - including math, science and language arts – and are tailored to suit kids of different age groups - preschool, kindergarten and elementary grades - and are developed by subject matter experts who know that kids learn best when they’re having fun.

Baking and cooking – Have a designated baking or cooking day once a week and be sure to involve the kids in the process from beginning to end. Give them a variety of recipes and stock up on the ingredients ahead of time. If your little one can read, let him read from the recipe and practice using unfamiliar words. Help him work through the instructions, one step at a time and avoid the temptation of doing it all by yourself. This is a great activity for summer afternoons when it’s too hot to play outside.

Start a summer scrapbook – This is a great way to preserve memories that your family can fondly cherish when the kids are older. Encourage your little ones to take pictures of special days or events and write about them. Encourage them to maintain a daily diary and describe everyday things and happenings. This is a fun way to keep them occupied and create a memory book for the future.

If you have other interesting summer activities for kids up your sleeve, I’d love to hear them!


Thursday, August 6, 2015

School's around the corner - did you do anything not on your 'to do' list?

Time flies and the best example for that is the pace at which the summer goes by. We look forward to it and plan a whole bunch of things to do. Stick it on the refrigerator. Think about it. Talk about it. Actually do things on the list. But, most holidays, something gets left out for the last few weeks or days.

So the countdown has begun. Have the kids played enough? Outside, inside, with friends, on their own and with their grandparents? Oh, there's never enough time to play. Did you do something that was not on the list?


Well, we did something interesting which was not on our list. In fact, my mother organized it for all of us. We went and played an escape room game. We were a multi-generational group - grandparents, parents and grandkids. What a ball we had!

Each one of us participated. Solved sudoku, searched for keys, scrambled through lots of misleading things in the room, and searched for clues. Yeah, all of us. On our knees, over cupboards and under the tablecloth!

We raced against the clock, shouted out stuff, scrambled around, found false leads and tried solving things under pressure. We could not get out within the prescribed time, but we did enjoy the madness!

What unexpected thing did you do this summer?

Monday, July 27, 2015

Understanding the five senses

Our senses are what we use to see what is out there in the world around us, where it is, to know if it is changing etc. This is one of the most important part of being alive, this feeling of being alive to everything around us, to react and interact with thing around us.


Five Senses” by Nicki Dugan Pogue, licensed under CC BY SA 2.0

Like everything else in nature, our kids use their senses without our intervention. By our introducing them to sensory activities, we enhance their engagement with their senses. We must enthuse our kids about the world around us. They must understand that they share this planet with creatures of all hues, shapes and kinds. Just by dominating the planet, it does not mean that we are independent of others. Kids must be encouraged to get their hands dirty, to look around, to smell things, to hear things and taste a variety of things.

Here is a roundup of activities that get our kids to use their senses to wonder at the world around us–

  1. Help kids listen to bird calls. Some wake up real early and others are rulers of the evening. Can they distinguish sounds without seeing the bird? A simpler exercise is to get the kids blindfolded and then talk from a short distance away. Can they recognize who is talking?
  2. Lay out a variety of food – cooked rice, beans, diced tomatoes, cereal etc. With their eyes blindfolded, can they touch and tell what’s on the plate?
  3. Can a kid smell food and recognize what’s getting prepared? Try frying garlic/onion, baking a cake, skinning an orange and cutting fresh vegetables – distinguishing smells can be a fun activity. Try smelling and identifying odd smells too.
  4. Mute some program and see if the kids can recognize what the person is saying. This might be better for a slightly older child as lip reading might not be very easy.
  5. Try closing one eye to see how depth perception changes
  6. Let vibrating phones on surfaces teach a child how we can actually feel a sound!
  7. Try this experiment to see how different parts of the body differ in feeling things.
So, go on and try these activities!


Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Cool Virtual Pet Games

If your child has been spending a lot of time in the virtual world and hankering for a pet at home, then in most probability it’s a virtual pet she’s adopted online! Virtual pet games have taken the world by storm and boast of a wide age range of players – 6 to 60! Here are a few of the most popular virtual pet games that you should be playing.


Neopets
A sensation in the online world was born in 1999 – it was called Neopets. With millions of members clambering for the latest and the most exclusive pets, Neopets soon became a way of life. Besides offering virtual pets, the world of Neopets offered users a number of mini flash games too that made sure ‘once a Neopian, always a Neopian’. As Neopets continues to enjoy the same amount of popularity if not twofold, game developers have taken a cue and released a plethora of similar virtual pet games that are almost as much fun! Look out for lores in Neopets which make quite a cheerful read on a dull day and otherwise too!

Dragon Cave
Dragon Cave is an online game that allows users to adopt virtual pets – collect eggs, raise them to adulthood, and then breed them to cre­ate interesting lineages. Founded back in 2006, the game runs on the concept of stealing dragon eggs from a nest and keeping them as one’s own and later hatching them for a baby dragon. Players will have to click a certain number of times on the eggs to hatch them else they’ll expire leaving behind quite morbid message about how they died from lack of care! More the number of clicks, the sooner will the eggs hatch and dragons grow up. The interactive and very supportive community of Dragon Cave makes it easy for newbies to understand the game promptly and play it with expertise.

Flight Rising
Flight Rising is another online dragon game that is based on lore, just like Neopets. Every player has to choose a Flight at the beginning of the registration process. Picking a particular Flight determines the sort of Lair the player will eventually have and the eye color of the dragon. Once players get a dragon, the site automatically assigns another dragon to the player of the opposite gender to be its mate. Other than breeding dragons, there are a number of things to do with them – feed them, dress them up, gather items which can be sold, play mini games, fight in the coliseum, look for tiny pets for your dragons, or just interact with the community.

From the plethora of virtual pet games that are available online, it looks like they are here to stay for quite some time more. Either get your kids to adopt a virtual pet or you sneak into the virtual world to breed a pet – after all, it’s worth feeling like a kid again!