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8 votes
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Spaced repetition for teaching two-year olds how to read (Interview)
18 votes -
How CoComelon captures our children’s attention
15 votes -
The north African children paying a bloody price for Europe’s insatiable appetite for cocaine
13 votes -
The great deterioration of local community was a major driver of the loss of the play-based childhood
26 votes -
New York passes legislation that would ban 'addictive' social media algorithms for kids
51 votes -
Louisiana lawmakers approve surgical castration option for those guilty of sex crimes against kids
39 votes -
The Goya paintings you aren't supposed to look at
11 votes -
Milestone: Eldest child hits 18!
I'm just spouting here. Today I feel old, yet I'm mid 40s. My eldest daughter today is 18. We had a family party for her yesterday and it was lovely. It's so crazy where the years go. As I sit...
I'm just spouting here. Today I feel old, yet I'm mid 40s. My eldest daughter today is 18. We had a family party for her yesterday and it was lovely.
It's so crazy where the years go. As I sit here, the 3.5 year old plays Duplo by the sofa on a lazy Sunday, the two other late teenagers upstairs and still not out of bed, I wonder what happens when they all leave and the house becomes peaceful.
I have a long time to go with the youngest having arrived while I'm in the later years for having a child, he will practically grow up a single sibling. Holidays are certainly going to get cheaper in the long term.
45 votes -
The complex question of screen influence on youth
14 votes -
Outdoor time is good for your kids' eyesight. Here's why.
21 votes -
Do children have a “right to hug” their parents?
14 votes -
10-year-old Texas boy linked to 2022 killing, according to officials
11 votes -
The parents in my classroom
25 votes -
This is a teenager
36 votes -
The “bad nanny” wars
7 votes -
South Africa recalls cough syrup sold in at least six countries
7 votes -
Hilary Cass' NHS report is rife with debunked theories and falsehoods
30 votes -
Here are thirteen other explanations for the adolescent mental health crisis. None of them work.
17 votes -
A brief rundown of some of the flaws of the Cass review
14 votes -
Idaho libraries must move materials deemed harmful to children, or face lawsuits, under new law
24 votes -
Parenthood venting thread
I think my son is the cutest six-month-old that has ever lived, but damn, this month has been so hard. We all had COVID in the beginning of March, so my wife and I burned a bunch of sick days...
I think my son is the cutest six-month-old that has ever lived, but damn, this month has been so hard.
We all had COVID in the beginning of March, so my wife and I burned a bunch of sick days while being very ill, exhausted, and awake all night with a screaming baby. Screaming.
He got better for about 2 days and then immediately got a nasty cold which he kindly passed to us. More sick days, more screaming, less sleep than we got with COVID.
The cold turned into an ear infection after two weeks of horrible congestion, so his doctor put him on Amoxicillin. Except the Amoxicillin didn't work on the ear infection after 9 days of treatment. Oh, and he started having bloody diarrhea.
We went to the doctor immediately and they said, "Oh, yeah, that's definitely blood and that's not great. We're going to try a different antibiotic now and send his stool to get tested."
Then, my washing machine, which was full of diarrhea pajamas, broke down. After several hours of tear down, I was able to drain it and replace the drain pump.
Washing machine was working great, except the gasket/seal on the door is old and didn't go back on properly during the repair. Water on the floor (minor leak, no big) and now have to deal with replacing that.
Meanwhile, the kid still doesn't sleep at night and seems to communicate mainly through crying, whining, and grunting. The fact that he isn't babbling, squealing, or mimicking us is honestly a little stressful. He's six months old and I'm seeing him "become conscious" in a lot of really amazing ways. His laugh is absolutely incredible, he plays with toys in what seems like a pretty advanced way, he is crushing his physical and cognitive milestones way ahead of schedule, but he has a handful of social milestones he hasn't hit yet. My wife has autism in her family and I have ADHD, so any developmental delays are obviously pretty concerning to me. He is making eye contact and laughing though, so I guess that's good.
I really shouldn't complain. I'm a teacher and we just had a week off. Most people don't get that. But I'm so exhausted and work tomorrow just sounds daunting. We can't send the kiddo to daycare with bloody diarrhea and I seriously cannot take any more sick days this year. I guess one silver lining is that my mother-in-law came up from out of state when my wife told her she was losing her sanity over all of this. So, we do have a couple days of childcare covered this week.
Tl;Dr: Month from hell.
Edit: I'll add a positive. He was super funny and full of laughs today and yesterday during the day time (night time still isn't fun). He also seemed to get a little scared during the eclipse today during totality, and I think that's adorable in a way. He did a pouty whine and only stopped when I put him closer to me and let him see my face.
Anyone else want to share some war stories?
38 votes -
Jury finds Jennifer Crumbley, the Michigan school shooter’s mother, guilty of manslaughter
56 votes -
Groundbreaking lawsuit accuses Roblox of exploiting young creators
22 votes -
The costs of a phone-based childhood
35 votes -
How did you decide on a daycare for your small child/children?
Hello, I hope this is the right place for this kind of question. I've thought about posting it for a few weeks now but didn't know whether I should or not. My wife has recently opened a small home...
Hello, I hope this is the right place for this kind of question. I've thought about posting it for a few weeks now but didn't know whether I should or not.
My wife has recently opened a small home daycare. We tailored everything to what we would look for if we needed daycare for our child, which was a small class size (5 children max), fully licensed and compliant with all local and state laws (which a lot of other places aren't), plenty of safe indoor and outdoor space (including a whole damn playground), and a learning-based curriculum rather than just babysitting. We have gotten a couple of people to sign up, but are having a rough time attracting more. Some people message us to ask questions, but then never reply when we provide answers. We've tried lowering our prices a bit to get started, and we're very flexible when it comes to time and needs.
So I'm just wondering, for any parents out there who have or have had small children and needed daycare, how did you decide on a place? Where/how did you find this place? And what about it stood out to you? Was it the price? Location? Recommendation of a close friend?
Any insight would be appreciated, thanks.
19 votes -
12-year-old student opened fire at a secondary school in southern Finland on Tuesday morning, killing one and seriously wounding two other students, police said
39 votes -
Children predict the year 2000 (1966, video)
25 votes -
Microsoft, Rockstar, Epic, and others are being sued for using "addictive psychological features" in games like Minecraft, GTA 5, and Fortnite
28 votes -
Florida latest to restrict social media for kids as legal battle looms
22 votes -
VHEMT: the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement
31 votes -
Birthrates are plummeting worldwide. Why?
47 votes -
The island of violent Basketball
4 votes -
Black LGBTQ+ youth need spaces that embrace them fully, researchers say
7 votes -
Teaching coding to an eight year old with Scratch?
I have a relative whose 8 year old has shown a keen interest in coding. He even takes books out of the library about coding even though he's never done it and I dont think he understands most of...
I have a relative whose 8 year old has shown a keen interest in coding. He even takes books out of the library about coding even though he's never done it and I dont think he understands most of what he's reading. Seems like a little Bill Gates just dying to get started.
I used to teach LOGO to kids back when the dinosaurs roamed the earth and I looked at some recent versions. Its good, and the logic is all there, but the end results are fairly mundane for a kid who's already experienced amazing video games. Then I stumbled across Scratch, a much more visual programming tool and it seems to fit what we need. Scratch allows kids to make animations, simple games, even do motion detection, music all with sprites that they can manipulate using drag and drop coding blocks. Lots of online video tutorials that he can follow himself too. https://scratch.mit.edu/
Before I dive headlong into Scratch, just wondering if there are other even better tools for teaching coding to kids? Or what your experience might be with them?
20 votes -
Death of nonbinary teen Nex Benedict after school fight is ruled a suicide, medical examiner says
34 votes -
Marathon runner, 12, sets her sights on 2028 Olympics
5 votes -
Children to no longer be prescribed puberty blockers, NHS England confirms
42 votes -
New York midwife fined for giving 1,500 children homeopathic pellets instead of vaccines
42 votes -
One in four school-starters in England and Wales not toilet-trained, say teachers
40 votes -
How parents' trauma leaves biological traces in children
18 votes -
The limits of the lunchbox moment
14 votes -
The Arizona school setting kids with autism up for success
11 votes -
How your family shapes your body image
6 votes -
Three long-term effects of a "plastic wrap parenting" style
21 votes -
Non-binary teenager dies a day after alleged assault at Oklahoma school
66 votes -
Delaying parenthood via the cryopreservation of live-born children - the unintended consequences of blurring embryonic and human rights
18 votes -
How I taught the Iliad to Chinese teenagers
19 votes -
Parkland mass shooting victims send AI robocalls to NRA-supporting US politicians
29 votes -
Does your Irish child speak with an American accent? The change may not last forever, linguistic expert says.
16 votes