Math is seriously fun at the Boonshoft!

Our family has a membership to our local children’s museum, the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery, and whenever we go we always have a great time.  My kids’ favorite thing to see first is whatever the featured exhibit is – they know it’s going to be special!  We recently went to check out Math Midway, which will be the featured exhibit through April 29th.  I was interested to see how fun math could be, and this exhibit made it fun in SO many ways!  It was so fun that when I told Sophie she could choose one more activity before she left, she chose to go BACK to Math Midway.  It was the first AND last thing we did on our visit.

Sophie making cool shapes with laser light on the "Ring of Fire"

The Math Midway is set up like a carnival midway, with lots of cool booths where you can do fun math games.  Like using math to distort a photo of yourself in the Fun House:

Joshua's face on math!

This was the kids’ absolute favorite activity – using a wavelength to design your own roller coaster, then test it out and time it. Super fun! They did it over and over.

Building a rollercoaster like their heroes Phineas & Ferb

I liked this exhibit because there really were activities for kids of all ages.  Even the youngest kiddos could romp around on this mat while the older kids built a giant puzzle:

Little kids could also great all kinds of fun shape and puzzle creations on this giant magnetic board:

This is really just a snippet of the many fun activities at the Math Midway. We had a great time, learned a lot, and highly encourage anyone in the Dayton area to take their kids for a stroll through all these great math games and activities at the Boonshoft.  I know we’ll be going back to see Math Midway again before it leaves town April 29th.

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I am being compensated for this post.  All opinions about the exhibit are my own.

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Simplifying life. Or at least April.

Last April was insane.

It started with Sam’s birthday, which we spent in St. Louis.

The next weekend, we drove back to St. Louis for Andy’s grandfather’s funeral (and a quick trip to the pediatric emergency room thrown in for fun). Then I had the bright idea to drive myself insane try to make Lightsabers out of pretzels for Sam’s class.

The finished product!

Then we had a joint birthday party for both kids with our entire families, which was quickly followed by Kate’s birthday celebration at school, her actual birthday, and her skating party.

It was nuts and I about drove myself insane. (Shocker, right?)

But this April, I am determined to keep things simple. Determined.

So here’s my plan.

Sam’s birthday is on Monday April 2. Andy and Kate happen to be on spring break that week, which is good because Sam is convinced he is not going to school on his birthday. So either the three of them will spend the day together, or I’ll take the day off and we’ll all do something. Something simple, like going to the park. That evening we’ll have dinner of his choosing, cake, ice cream and presents.

Then, we’ll take a break in the madness until Kate’s birthday, which is Sunday, April 22. We’ll take a treat to school the Friday before and then on her birthday she’ll have her party at the skating rink, and she’s already decided that she wants to go to Frisch’s for dinner (and that I have to let her have all the chili spaghetti that she wants). Cake, ice cream and presents at our house.

The end.

Oh, it’s the end except that the week after that is Kate’s First Communion, which I am also determined to keep simple. I’m thinking church followed by brunch at a new cafe in our town.

Note that none of this involves getting our house clean. I am no dummy.

So, as I stare April down, that is my plan. My only fear is that I will be so focused on keeping everything simple that I will drive myself crazy with that. I may or may not already have a Google doc entitled “How to keep April simple.” There’s something counterproductive about that, I think.

What do you think? Can I do it? Can I survive April without letting things spin out of control?

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Disclosure: Compensation was provided by Sprint via Glam Media. The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and are not indicative of the opinions or positions of Sprint.

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Who’s the BOSS?

Sadly, I am not writing this post to reminisce about my favorite 80’s sitcom, although I guess it WAS kind of about a power struggle…so en pointe.  Because this post is about a power-hungry five-year-old and her frustrated mother.

crazy soph
She's cute. And she's planning a hostile takeover.

Sophie was stubborn and strong-willed from the moment she left the womb, and we’ve had our share of power struggles in the past, but since she’s come through her language delay, things have been much easier.  Until now.  Recently, girlfriend has decided to test me HARD in a couple of areas.  The power struggle is ON, and I am determined to let her know I am still the Alpha Female in this household.

The times Sophie most tries to assert herself as the one in “control” are when we are getting ready to get dressed or leave the house, and at dinner time.  Two or three times a week she will refuse to go potty/get dressed before school or gymnastics, or any random time when we need to get out the door.  Then, every night at dinner if there is something on her plate she doesn’t “like” (i.e. anything not fruit, yogurt, or peanut-butter related) she absolutely refuses  to eat it until she is threatened with punishment and/or I shovel the bites into her mouth for her.  She would rather go to her room for the rest of the evening thaan eat those bites.  She would rather lose iPad privileges than eat those bites.  She would give up TV, computer, Wii – anything before she’d eat those bites.  So I ALWAYS make her eat them, rather than “grounding” her from something.  But it takes lots of extra time and usually I am a little hot under the collar by the time all is said and done.

And, even though I have yet to let her “win” this one, she still does it every time she is offered food she doesn’t want to eat.  I know she is winning a partial victory just by causing so much inconvenience and irritation for me in the first place.  The other night I was pretty much convinced she is a sociopath. *Ahem*.

I pretty much just don’t know what to do with her, other than, as I have said many times, save my pennies for either a) her stay at boarding school or b) my stay in the looney bin in aabout 2021.

Which is why I had to laugh when TheMotherhood.com asked me to co-host a chat this Thursday, 3/15 at 1PM EST with a few other fab bloggers and Susan Stiffelman, the author of Parenting Without Power Struggles.   I saw the info about this talk in their newsletter and was totally going to attend anyway, so BONUS! Susan is a family therapist, and an officianado on parent-child power struggles, and she did, after all, write the book! She’s also the Parent Coach at the Huffington Post and I cant wait to hear what she has to say!  The talk is all-text, here at the Motherhood.com.  I hope you’ll join me and my co-hosts for some straight-forward talk about how to eliminate power struggles.  Perhaps after Thursday’s talk I’ll be able to start saving my pennies for something a little more exciting than a stay at the funny farm.  Like a stay at a spaaaaaaaaa.  Or a lifetime supply of Mountain Dew and Cadbury Creme eggs.  You know, something really valuable.

I hope you’ll join us on Thursday!  I’m not being compensated or sponsored for my participation, it’s just a topic I am really interested in and need to learn about right now, and I am glad to have a great interactive forum in which to do so.

I’d like to have some other viewpoints besides my own going into this, so tell me, what are some of the power struggles you have with your kids?

 

 

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