|
Posted By Jessica LaFollette, Ph.D & Kali Fedor, Ed.D,
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
Updated: Monday, August 5, 2024
|
On July 31st, NAGC’s Parent, Family, and Community Network held its second Sip ‘n’ Speak: Relaxed Talks on Raising Gifted Children. These informal member chat sessions bring parents and professionals within the gifted community together to discuss various topics. The PFC network will continue to host more of these chats throughout the coming year to serve our wider NAGC community. These chat sessions are each framed with a few prepared questions or topic stems to get the conversations flowing while allowing for organic questions along the way from participants.
In July, our goal as a network was to allow parents and professionals the opportunity to discuss the challenge of responding to our children’s expressions of boredom with engaging ideas for at-home learning, especially in the later weeks of summer. Our goal for the evening was to discover how to transform those "I'm bored" moments into opportunities for intellectual growth and exploration. With a few facilitated questions, the discussion flowed organically from one topic of concern to another. The following article is a summary of all the ideas and resources generated by this lively conversation.
What learning activities do you recommend to manage boredom at home?
- Hands-on Play and Screen-free
Learning Activities
- Engineering and Craft Kits such as
Crunch Labs and Snap Circuits
- Parent created boxes with random
pieces and props for creative and imaginative play
- Puzzles https://www.completingthepuzzle.com/
This is a puzzle-renting company. They send you a puzzle in the mail with
a return label. When you send it back, they'll send you your next one.
You always have a new one to work on. Anywhere from 250 - 1000 pieces.
- Board Games and Card Games were a
hot topic and generated many excellent ideas of old and new favorites
including: Qwirkle, Blokus, Sequence, Stratego, Mastermind, Code Names,
Risk, Trekking, Trivial Pursuit, Chess, Checkers, Exploding Minions -
Kittens - Zombies, Ticket to Ride, Catan, Othello, Skyjo, Battleship, Uno
(and new Uno spin-offs), Mancala, Pandemic, Scrabble, Scattergories,
Prime Club, Quarto, Taco-cat-goat-cheese-pizza, Ring it, Play Nine,
Abalone, Power Grid, Trigon, Spontuneous
- Creating collaborative family
trivia games with notecards where everyone contributes questions
- Taking field trips to unusual
parks, museums, or going “behind the scenes” at a restaurant, factory or
place of business
- Learning with Technology
- Duolingo - Study a new language together
- Wonderopolis – A great place for curious learners to
explore and learn new things.
- Camp Wonderopolis – A part of Wonderopolis created
specifically for summer learning.
- TED Ed – Lots of topics, ideas, and concepts to
explore through video.
- 5 Clue Challenge – The 5 Clue Challenge gives
learners the opportunity to receive 5 clues and use what they know to
make an educated guess about what the clues describe.
- Google Maps Treks – Such a great tool for learners
who would like to explore but are unable to leave their homes.
- National
Geographic Kids – Find amazing facts about animals, science, history,
and geography, along with fun competitions, games, and more.
- Magic Tree House
– If your child likes The Magic Tree House series (and let’s be honest,
who doesn’t?), they’ll love The Magic Tree House website. Students climb
up the tree and enter the tree house to find some great puzzles, fun
games, and quizzes on any of the 45+ MTH books.
- Toporopa
– Can’t afford that summer vacation schlepping around Europe? No worries,
just pull up Toporopa on your nearest browser and learn all about
the geographical, political, historical, and economic aspects of the
wonderful continent.
- Coder Kids – Coder
Kids is a great company that offers online, in-person, and on-demand
coding classes and camps for kids of all ages. Their free on-demand
class, Introduction to Scratch Coding, is the perfect way for kids to
begin their coding journey!
- Code.org – offers Hour-of-code lessons that are
particularly useful for kids looking for a quick class. They can learn to
program Minecraft animals and Star Wars droids or code their adventure
with Frozen characters.
- Resources for Families (Prince
William County Schools) https://www.pwcs.edu/academics___programs/gifted_education/parent_resources
- Ideas for Getting Kids Excited
about Reading
- Read the same book to have
conversations
- For younger children: Illustrate
the story or Act it out with toys
- Parents can read the narrator
stuff and the kids do the “voices” of the characters to not be
overwhelming.
- Record them re-telling the story -
News anchor summary of the book
- Movie and book comparison as a
family discussion
- Audio books if it is a topic that
is written above their readability level.
- www.getepic.com
- https://giftedguru.com/books-for-gifted-kids/
Lists with links and several other helpful articles on reading for gifted
children
- https://www.mensaforkids.org/
- Book lists and challenges for all ages
- Bookmarks with deep thinking
questions
As a group, parents and professionals concluded that modeling active learning, curiosity, and imagination alongside our gifted children brought the most positive long-term ways to counteract boredom. Many parents shared stories of interaction and/or healthy competition as a family that allowed children to stretch both their intellectual and social-emotional skills. We also agreed that technology can be an extremely helpful tool for learning and creativity while also a dangerous distraction.
If you are interested in attending our next PFC Network event designed specifically for parents and families, please join us on September 25th for Part 2 of our Advocacy series that began in February. This webinar will include a panel of national experts sharing advice for how gifted families can speak out clearly for their child’s needs at school and beyond. Registration is free and open to anyone. https://nagc.org/page/webinars
Tags:
Network
Parent Family Community
Resources
Permalink
|
|
Posted By Jessica LaFollette and Kali Fedor,
Monday, January 8, 2024
|
The leadership of the Parent, Family, and Community Network (PFCN) is on a mission in 2024 to help you find more ways to learn and connect with others about your gifted and 2e kiddos! Did you know that our network has eight amazing areas of focus? They are:
- Building partnerships with families, schools, businesses, industries, civic and service groups, helping professionals, and other communities.
- Facilitating education, assistance, and support for families of the gifted.
- Locating, developing, and disseminating relevant resources, programs, and materials.
- Assisting educators in working with gifted students, parents, families, and communities.
- Increasing public recognition of and support for the needs of the gifted.
- Linking gifted individuals with other gifted individuals in the wider community.
- Encouraging and assisting the development of local and state organizations to support gifted education.
- Linking with other networks and organizations to help fulfill common goals.
Along with connecting you with others, we want to address our network’s areas of focus with purposeful planning and the creation of fabulous resources. Our hope is the resources we create and share will allow you to turn around and use them today. As you can imagine this will be quite a journey throughout the year to meet our goals, but we can’t do it without your support and active engagement. We have many ideas and surprises planned along the way, so pause reading this blog and join our network right now. Hey, you are still reading. What are you waiting for? Go join so you do not miss all of our announcements and events as they are shared!
Alright, now that we have you signed up for the network and all the upcoming announcements, let’s move on from the build-up and suspense.
We are excited to announce that this year we are starting a virtual series of webinars and informal “Chat” meetings on topics selected by our membership last year. Amazing right!?! We are still working out some of the finer details for each event, but there is good news. The good news is that since you just joined the network a few moments ago, we will be sending out announcements and reminders through our Network. As a member, you will now get all of these notifications, so you will not miss out on all the fun, information, and connections during these events. We hope you are as excited as we are for these new events from the PFCN!
Here is the current schedule of events, but as we mentioned, we have many ideas so this schedule may evolve throughout the year. Stay tuned!
Webinars
- Advocacy Series
- Part 1: February 28, 7:00 - 8:00 pm Eastern
- Special Guest & Speaker - Dr. Christine Deitz
- Part 2: September 25, 7:00 - 8:00 pm Eastern
Chat Meetings
- Friendships & Social Skills (SEL)
- April 24, 7:00 - 8:00 pm Eastern
- Resources for boredom/motivation
- July 31, 7:00 - 8:00 pm Eastern
If you have other ideas or suggestions for potential webinars or chat meeting discussions, please do not hesitate to reach out to us. We love the inspiration and ideas that come from chatting with our members!
We are looking forward to seeing you during our first Webinar event on February 28th from 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm (EST) when Dr. Christine Deitz joins us to kick off this important topic within gifted education! Advocacy is so critical, not just for parents, but also for our kids, their teachers, and others in our community to ensure the needs of our kids are being met.
See you soon!
Jessica LaFollette, PFCN Chair
Dr. Kali Fedor, PFCN Chair-Elect
Download File (PDF)
Tags:
Network
Parent Family Community
Permalink
|
|