This year the kids decided to undertake a cooking project entirely on their own, with zero help from mom and dad. Here they are working on gingerbread cookies:
The cookies were really good, too (Ethan picked a recipe from the King Arthur cookbook). Huzzah-- I need to get them started in on making dinners during the week...
NB: astute observers will note that Lydia is wearing a hat indoors in the second photo -- Amy claims that I keep the house thermostat setting way too low, but I pretend not to hear :-)
Random scribblings about life in our family. This blog was started back in 2008 when we moved to Cambridge (UK) for a year.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Sewing projects
Lydia's first sewing project with the machine that her grandmother gave her:
Threading the machine was a little tricky, but the two of us have managed to figure it out. Lydia is thrilled...
Threading the machine was a little tricky, but the two of us have managed to figure it out. Lydia is thrilled...
Monday, December 6, 2010
Facebook in the news
The Times had another article on cyber-bullying this week (previous article in the series is here). This new one deals less with the legal and administrative issues and more about all the various different tricky ways that cyber-bullying can happen, and the difficulty that parents are having keeping up. One of the examples they cited in the article was a boy who was being bullied by three of his classmates; although the boy had no cell phone and was not on Facebook, the classmates actually created a face Facebook page in the victim's name and proceeded to post lots of nasty material to it. Whew.
I also found this link especially interesting (it was mentioned on Bruce Schneier's security blog, which I follow), which talks about the interesting idea of "wall scrubbing". Cool example of kids taking matters into their own hands to keep control of their on-line social presence (when facing a potentially dangerous/hostile environment).
Confession: I feel very dinosaur-like when I read this stuff. I can barely manage a blog post a month, let alone a Facebook status update every half hour. I also feel slightly weird when I tell people that I subscribe to the New York Times print edition; none of my co-workers takes a newspaper, even among my college and grad school friends it's hard to find people who still read the paper regularly. Amy and I are not ready to give it up just yet, however (also we are secretly brainwashing our kids into enjoying reading the paper too, hah!).
I also found this link especially interesting (it was mentioned on Bruce Schneier's security blog, which I follow), which talks about the interesting idea of "wall scrubbing". Cool example of kids taking matters into their own hands to keep control of their on-line social presence (when facing a potentially dangerous/hostile environment).
Confession: I feel very dinosaur-like when I read this stuff. I can barely manage a blog post a month, let alone a Facebook status update every half hour. I also feel slightly weird when I tell people that I subscribe to the New York Times print edition; none of my co-workers takes a newspaper, even among my college and grad school friends it's hard to find people who still read the paper regularly. Amy and I are not ready to give it up just yet, however (also we are secretly brainwashing our kids into enjoying reading the paper too, hah!).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
-
A post about a second PCT ( Pacific Crest Trail ) section hike, this one up in Washington State (previous encounter with the PCT here ). I ...
-
Lydia decided to do her science fair project this year on "Oobleck". Oobleck is basically corn starch mixed with water (not too mu...