School and its stakeholders together have faced many challenges in the past but nothing like this pandemic of COVID-19. Teachers are adoptin

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School and its stakeholders together have faced many challenges in the past but nothing like this pandemic of COVID-19. Teachers are adoptin
28 Ways Jazz Up Your Kids School Lunch
Tips for Fun and Healthy School Lunch
1. Cookie cutter sandwiches: Make these with your kids. Slice the crusts off the bread and use cookie cutters in fun shapes. Pack a few extra to share with friends. 2. Nuts to You! One of the most boring things about brown bag lunches is the lack of variety and texture. Adding nuts or sunflower seeds to salads, soups and even sandwiches makes for crunch appeal. Try some toasted, spiced pecans in your bag instead of chips. 3. Mail Bags: This is fun for kids: include some mail for them. A note from you, a newspaper clipping, even a piece of junk mail you don't plan on opening (kids love to open things!) How about printing out something fun from the Web and including it? 4. Stickers: If you use brown paper bags, decorate them with stickers, especially at holidays. This is not just for kids, because adults love to show off that something special sent from home, too. And there's such a variety of theme-oriented and playful stickers these days. 5. Alphabet stamps: My mom used to take alphabet rubber stamps and ink pads and decorate my lunch bags with words and sentences. Try making up riddles, or jumbled words for your kids to unscramble. 6. Joke-a-Day: Do you have one of those joke a day calendars? Keep the old ones and throw ‘em in your family lunch bags. The day may be gone but the joke's still good. 7. Silly Pasta Salads: Pasta now comes in all sorts of fun shapes: basketballs, grape clusters, Christmas trees... Read More Read the full article
How to Get Your Student Organized for Success - 4 STEPS
By Jennifer Cummings, M.ed. One of the most important skills any student can have is the ability to be organized. Whether your child is entering grade 4 or grade 8, if they have the ability to keep their books, papers and projects in order and accessible, they will have an excellent chance of performing to their best ability all year long! Though most teachers work hard in classrooms to teach these skills every day, you can help your child to learn to keep themselves organized by following these simple S.T.E.P.S.!
S- Simplify Supplies
Students tend to want all of the latest gadgets and gizmos that are available in the back-to-school section of your local retailer, convinced by the media they are all necessary for academic success. However, encourage your child to buy only the basic supplies required by their school. The more pockets, digital planners, and other unnecessary add-ons your child has, the greater the opportunity to lose more important things they actually need for class. If your child does not get a school supply list ahead of time, you may want to purchase some basic notebooks and folders before school starts, and then ask your child's teacher for their recommendations after school begins. Buying only what you need helps your child stay organized and helps you save money, too!
T- Take Time
Before the school year gets too far along, take the time to create a daily plan for how your student will keep up with school projects and materials; by making a plan as a family to be organized, your student receives the support they need to organize themselves and stay on track. Decide on a certain place to put notices, backpacks, and do homework each day. Consider hanging a special calendar to write important school dates and projects on. Also, discuss who is responsible for checking that homework is done well each night; be sure that responsibility is placed on your student to promote good self-management skills; if mom and dad do all the work, the student won't get the real benefits!
E- Eliminate Excess
As parents know, backpacks, desks, folders, notebooks, and bedrooms are all notorious sites for collecting clutter in many forms. Corrected papers (some that you may be very interested in seeing!), snack leavings, assignment sheets, and old gym socks are but some of the detritus that accumulates during the daily school routine. Be sure that you have your child eliminate unnecessary papers weekly, if not nightly, from their needed school work in folders, notebooks, binders, and backpacks. Not only will this help to reduce clutter, but will help you to be sure that you are seeing more of your child's work on a regular basis.
P- Prepare Ahead
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Humor: Goldfish Lessons
By Cherly Moeller - Family Funny Stuff Top Ten Things a Mom Can Learn from a Goldfish 10. You can both eat and be eaten. 9. Keep the glass clean; it helps you to see outside 8. Just because you own a castle by the sea, doesn't mean it's worth much. 7. Don't let the mirror give you a false sense of security because it makes you look bigger than you are 6. Eating more doesn't eliminate the ones that want to eat you. Read More Read the full article