Jen's Rhyme and Reason

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Our New Winter Hobby

I never thought I'd hear myself say this, but I'm excited that I just joined a gym! There's a new club that's opening in the neighborhood called Lifetime Fitness, and the facility is CRAZY. I don't know how they can afford to run this thing on the paltry amount they're charging, I feel like I should offer them more.

The first ten minutes of talking to the rep, we only covered what's available for the kids, so I was kind of proud of myself on that one. The daycare there is bananas. They have organized activities, several rooms to play in, and a gymnasium to run around in. They also offer motion classes, dance classes, swim lessons and stuff like that! When they're a little older, there's an entire rock climbing room, indoor and outdoor turf soccer fields, water slides for the outdoor pool, you name it. For now, I'm just excited to have a constructive place for them to run around when they need it. It's a challenge when it's cold and dark outside.

For me, it will be some mental health when we need to get out of the house. I can walk, lift a couple weights, go to a yoga class. The spinning studio sounds off the hook, they actually have air blowers to make it feel like you're riding outside, and movie screens with the Tour de France or something like that. I'm going to have to give it a go.

I can't wait for December 11!

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Kyle and Lorina

Kyle and Lorina were kind enough to take a chance on me, and let me photograph their wedding last weekend! It was fun, beautiful, and a HECK of an education... Here are my favorites!












Friday, November 26, 2010

Mothers of Multiples

Someone sent this video out to the Mothers of Multiples club, and I had to laugh -- I think I've heard all of these comments a few dozen times... It's not that I don't appreciate the interest, I guess there is just not much variety possible in the twins small talk.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Counting, Kind Of

Nothing riveting, just another video of blabbing, but kind of cute. : )

Phone Clean Up

I just moved all the random pictures I've taken off my phone, thought I would share a few!














Thursday, November 11, 2010

The Unexpected On Film

Don't ever lose faith in humanity to be creative and joyful... More evidence of what we can do, when we put our minds to it.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Sesame Street

My friend Stacey sent me the following article, and it choked me up a little. We don't watch Sesame Street much, but we do watch it, and they really love it. Personally, my favorite episode was one with the most hilarious rap I've ever heard, I was on the floor laughing.

Click here, start at about 8:00 for efficiency.

And while I'm at it, we had a half hour dance party to this tasty little clip. Seriously, there's something a little odd about it, but we had a great time.

here's the article.

From today’s Writer’s Almanac:

It was on this day in 1969 that Sesame Street premiered. The children's television show is known for its nonchalant, jaunty, and offhand presentation, but it actually has its foundations in an elaborately orchestrated utopian mission to bring about social equality in America.

The founders of Sesame Street, led by Joan Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett, said they aimed to "master the addictive qualities of television and do something good with them." And that good was to prepare children from disadvantaged backgrounds to do as well in school as their privileged counterparts. They recognized that early literacy leads to success in school, which, in turn, is one of the most established paths out of poverty in America. Children from low socioeconomic households entered school with a huge disadvantage: generally, a vocabulary of about 3,000 words, compared to the 20,000 words that kids from high-income households had. Sesame Street creators conceived of their show as a way to provide kids from poor neighborhoods with tools to improve their chances of doing well in school. Low-income households in America were just as likely to own a television as high-income households, so they knew that their target audience would have equal access to the show.

They needed a lot of money and a lot of talent to achieve their vision. They were intent on making it a high-quality show that children would actually want to watch, and so they needed to compete with well-funded, well-produced commercial television shows. They raised about $8 million; donors included the Carnegie Foundation and the U.S. federal government, and allotted $28,000 (of 1968 dollars) for each episode. They assembled a team of early childhood development educators, led by a renowned Harvard expert named Gerald Lesser, and they set aside 10–15 percent of their budget for research. They had a board of directors, which held a series of seminars designing the curriculum for the show. The big guiding question was: "What do children need to know before they get to school?" Each aspect of every show was geared toward this.

They spent 18 months preparing to do the first episode. For a long time, they couldn't agree on a name for the show; in promo materials it was called "Preschool Educational Television Show." Eventually, they went with what the name everyone disliked the least, a reference to the magical "Open Sesame" phrase that in the Ali Baba tale opens the door to a cave of hidden treasure.

One of the early producers of the show recognized that her small child could recite beer jingles and other TV ads, so they enlisted Madison Avenue advertising people to help create phrases and images that were memorable. They performed intensive screening tests before the first show aired, with the idea that if you could hold the attention of children, you could get them to learn (an idea about which Malcolm Gladwell wrote extensively it in his book The Tipping Point; he called it "the stickiness factor" of Sesame Street). One of the pre-screening tests involved sitting a child in front of a recently filmed test episode of Sesame Street and also sticking a slide projector with random images beside the TV. The slide projector was a "distractor," and a new image would pop up every seven seconds. If the child looked away from Sesame Street and over to the slide show more than 50 percent of the time, the episode would get re-filmed. But if the child stayed with his eyes glued to the Sesame Street episode 80–90 percent of the time, the show was deemed suitably compelling and thus worthy of airing.

At first, one of the points where they seemed to be losing kids' attention was on the "street scenes," where human actors were trying to help gel the take-home curriculum lessons of the day. The team of childhood education experts had proclaimed that human beings should not interact with Muppets on the screen — that this would certainly confuse children. But Sesame Street producers eventually decided that in order to hold kids' attention, they needed the Muppets talking with humans, and so they re-shot those segments, disregarding experts' advice. The human-Muppet conversations came to define Sesame Street.

The show premiered on this day in 1969, and it was immediately a success. Within a year, Big Bird appeared on the cover of Time magazine. They found almost right away that children who watched Sesame Street performed better on standardized educational tests than children who did not watch the show. Ten years after the show debuted, there were 9 million children a week watching it. In the past four decades, the show has won eight Grammys and more than a hundred Emmys.

All sorts of celebrities have appeared on the show to count and teach letters. Last year, on the 40th anniversary, Michelle Obama appeared on the show to talk about eating fresh vegetables, and that day the characters on Sesame Street counted all the way to 40.