Latest stories

A Day in the Life of Wyoming Timberdoodlers

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Shared By:

Jennica of Casper, WY

Meet Our Family:

Hello! My name is Jennica and we’re proud to officially call ourselves a homeschool family starting kindergarten this fall. My oldest daughter turned 5 in April. We also have a 3-year-old daughter and 1-year-old son. We started Timberdoodle when my oldest turned 2 and we have been happily working at Preschool and PreK.

Our Morning:

My daughter recently turned 5 and she is done with PreK. We haven’t followed a traditional school year. Instead, we do it mostly when the kids ask. I’m writing about the “first day”of kindergarten. It’s June, but my daughter wanted to start school so we are.

After having French toast for breakfast, we get out the new books and she picks her favorite to start. We watched the Math-U-See video and she does the first couple pages. I decided a few things we won’t break into until she is a little older. We do geography and the doodling book and decide to call it a day.

Our Afternoon:

The weather is nice so we are having peanut butter sandwiches and strawberries outside for lunch while the girls are riding the scooters. I am busy trying to keep the baby out of my flowers.

When it’s time to put little brother down for a nap we check out the Gears set. It’s a little confusing which directions to follow, but we found some easy models and they had fun building their own designs.

Our Evening:

For dinner we made burgers.

It was a little hectic starting school on a whim in June, especially because I’m a big planner, but I like that we can do things on our own time frame.

We end the day with bedtime stories and cuddles. We’re excited to see what else this year has in store.

More About Our Family:

One fun activity that our family enjoys is going to the pool. Two days per week our community pool has toddler time and limits kids to 5 and under. For now, we like the quieter environment with the splash features off.

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Doodle Dollars

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Did you know that with almost every online Timberdoodle purchase you earn reward points? Spend a dollar, and we’ll give you a nickel back in credit.

Buying a Kindergarten Curriculum Kit for $795? You’ll add $39.75 to your Doodle Dollars account! Review that kit once it arrives and add a picture, and you’ll have $44 to spend on anything from Timberdoodle, even shipping!

Here are all the details:
timberdoodle.com/doodledollars

Deb: So Pearl, today we’re going to talk about Doodle Dollars: How do you get them? What do you do with them? Tell me what you know!

Pearl: Sure. Let’s start with what they are. Doodle Dollars are our reward point system for our customers who shop with us. You get them primarily by shopping online with us. I say “online” because they are automatically applied to your online account. That is where they accumulate. That’s where they get stored. If you place a phone order you can still get them but you will need to ask for them. They don’t automatically apply to phone orders. What they are is five percent back on everything that you purchase.

Deb: Everything?

Pearl: Well, that’s a good point. Close-out items don’t apply, and occasionally there will be another exception, if a manufacturer asks us not to apply that.

Deb: Currently I don’t think we have any like that. We had in the past, but not right now.

Pearl: So by and large, unless it’s a closeout item or a Damaged Sale item, you will get that five percent. So, if you ordered say a kindergarten Elite, that’s $39 that you have already in your account because you ordered.

Deb: Okay. What do you do with them?

Pearl: That’s a great question. So you redeem them to by going to your account, selecting how many you want to redeem, and there’s a little button “redeem” and then it gives you a gift certificate code and you can apply that to your next order, or any order, and basically, it’s just works like any other gift certificate. You can buy anything you want with it once you’ve added that to your account.

Deb: I’ve seen a whole bunch of people in the last month or so, because it’s back to school time, where they have used their Doodle Dollars because they forgot something. So they think they’ve got everything they need and, “Oh, I wish I had two of those…” or, “I wish I’d gotten this instead… or on top of…” or whatever. So then they’ll come in, they’ll use their Doodle Dollars. It will cover the item and it covers the shipping. That’s like getting something free. They really are a cool way to get free stuff.

Pearl: It’s a great thing. If you bought the curriculum you can afford. And now a little ways down the line you want to add something fun, something new. It’s a perfect way to do that.

Deb: Exactly. Or save them all up and use them at Christmas.  All right. Anything else we should know?

Pearl: I think that basically covers it… Oh! You know what I did forget? I forgot that you can earn Doodle Dollars for writing reviews for us. So depending on which item you’re reviewing and whether you want to add a picture to the review, you can earn anywhere between 20 and 100 Doodle Dollar points, which would be the equivalent of $1.00 to $5.00 for each review you write.

Deb: Wow! But, now,  there are some restrictions on that?

Pearl: There are. Lots of details. You can find them all on our site as to which items earn which amount of points and why.

Deb: But if you love to write that’s a great way to earn! If you have any questions, don’t forget to email us at…

Pearl:mail@timberdoodle.com!

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Timberdoodle Story #228

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Today’s Timberdoodle Story shared by:

Buttercup’s Home School

What made you consider Timberdoodle for the first time?

I really wanted something that was more hands on.

Before you decided to use Timberdoodle, what was your biggest obstacle or concern about using a Timberdoodle Curriculum Kit?

The kits come with so much, I was concerned that we would be doing school all day and the kids would get overwhelmed.

What helped you overcome that?

Once we went to the scheduler, we were able to adjust the work load to better fit our needs.

If your friend decided to start homeschooling and felt overwhelmed, what would you tell her?

To just take it one day at a time. If there is something that is difficult for the child then stop and find a better way to teach it. We always take a break with something fun after something difficult.

Is there anything unique about your family that you’d like to share with us?

We have been homeschooling for 3 years. This is the first year using Timberdoodle, and we love it. We spend about 4 hours a day on school. We take breaks for art class, guitar lessons, and karate.

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When Homeschooling Isn’t Fun

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Deb: Hope, what question are we looking at today?

Hope: Well, the question we’re looking at today is one that probably every homeschooling family encounters. It is, “What do I do when my child doesn’t want to do the school work?

Deb: Actually, I don’t think you see this much now [at the beginning of the year] because we’re all in the honeymoon stage, but probably around Christmas time, and certainly when you start up again, it’s like, “Oh, do we have to do this?” What are some of the reasons kids balk at doing their school work?

Hope: Well, there’s a lot of reasons kids balk. We did some brainstorming beforehand so we’ll go through some of the ideas that we thought of, why children may or may not want to do their school. One of the reasons right off the top is it may be too easy or too hard for them. If it’s one or the other that may cause them to not want to do their school work.

Deb: So drilling down and finding out, what is it? Why are you reacting to the school work? If it is too easy, what are some of our recommendations?

Hope: If it appears too easy, have them test out. There’s often placement tests with the school work or go towards the end of whatever the assignment is, such as the end of the construction set or towards the end of the math book or whatever. If they can accomplish it, move them up a grade. Don’t hold them back and make them bored with something that they already know.

Deb: Exactly. Okay, if it’s too hard?

Hope: If it’s too hard, again, you’ve got to drill down and figure out, why is it too hard? For math, if it’s too hard, probably you move back a grade.

Deb: You probably have skipped something. That happens a lot, especially the homeschool realm where you will try a curriculum one year, and you won’t try it the next year. All math programs don’t line up identically and if you’ve jumped courses you have may have missed a very major component in the math.

Hope: Or if your child was faking it all along it, typically around fourth grade is where it hits, and you realize they didn’t actually understand these concepts from the beginning. So you need to go back and work it again.

Deb: Figure it out, and go back and do that.

Hope: But if it’s not like math, if it’s more a construction set or something similar… One of the children that we are homeschooling right now through foster care struggles with fine motor skills. So things like that can be too difficult for them.

Deb: What we’ve seen is, there is resistance to doing it because it’s beyond his ability. It makes more sense, then, to take the project that would take another child maybe 15 minutes to do, but for him hours, to just dial it back and say, “Here’s all I want you to do. Just this very simple thing.” In fact, when you were little you could not see… in the construction realm, you couldn’t look at a 2-D picture and figure out what they wanted. And you cried a lot on that. So we learned. Okay. Don’t tell her to build the whole car. Just tell her, “All you have to do today is find the axle, put in the axle, and you’re done.” The next day, now we’ll find the wheels and put in the wheels. We tried to make it as simplistic as possible. And that’s all you needed to be able to develop those skills. So if you have a child who cries during the construction time, dial it back. Or if, in fact, their fine motor skills are just not able to do what other kids their age are doing, that’s okay. Take them back a step, get something bigger, bulkier to put together, but don’t say it’s not important. It is important. These are very important skills.

Hope: I guess we should address that little bit. One of the reactions that often homeschool families have when their child doesn’t like something is: Well, it must not be for them. It’s not worth pursuing because they’re not into construction, or they’re not into art, or they don’t really like this so we’re not going to do that. We believe that that is actually very detrimental to your child, to not pursue and give them a well-rounded education just because they don’t like something. Figure out why they don’t like it. Figure out what the issue is behind it and then address that.

Deb: If possible! So then you have to look at it. If they don’t like history, it could be the approach. It could be that it, again, is too hard, too easy. But you have to step back and say, “Is history important? Well, yeah. History is important. So, how am I going to make this more palatable to my child?” Math, the same way. Construction, the same way. So you step back. You look at it. You say, “We’ve got to work with this. How can I make it better?” Probably the easiest way is just to dial it back and make it, instead of a hours-long project, a 10 or 15-minute project. Any child can get in and get out that fast.

Hope: Yes. Another thing we looked at were learning styles. It could be that the curriculum you are using is not tailored towards your child’s learning style. So if they’re kinesthetic and you’re doing an auditory learning that’s not going to work for them. So make sure you’re addressing what learning style they are.

Deb: One example we were thinking of is science. In our own family some of you loved doing experiments and some of you hated it. That’s okay. All I want you to know is the science. So if you if you can get it by reading and believing the experiments do what they say they do, great! But a kinesthetic child will want to actually see it in action. So play around with learning styles and figure out which way is best.

Hope: Exactly! So, attention span. We’ve talked a little bit about that here. If they have a short attention span, break it up. The beauty of homeschooling is you don’t have to sit down and do school for four hours straight. Do an hour here, half an hour there. I know growing up we had a beautiful desk that Grandpa built for us and a beautiful little area to work on our school. We didn’t do school on that desk pretty much ever. We did it on the shelves at the warehouse. We did outside. We did in the living room. So we broke our school up a lot. We moved around. We weren’t forced to sit in a certain spot and do school for a long time. So look at attention span, I would say.

Character. Do you want to look at that one little bit?

Deb: Well, sometimes kids don’t want to do it because they don’t want to do it, and because you’ve never asked them to do something they don’t want to do. This is, from our perspective, a frustrating thing, when a mom comes to us and says, “We’ve used all of these curriculums and my child doesn’t like any of them.” They don’t know why they don’t like them, but they’re ready to jump ship and do something else. I’m not inclined to want to encourage that. I would be more inclined to say, “Figure out why what you’ve done in the past didn’t work and maybe stick with it. You’ve already invested x amount of money into that.” Why try again when it could just be a child who rules the roost and has never learned to do what was asked of him? To me, that’s really important. You need to look at… Is it too hard? Is it to easy? Is it the right learning style? But some of it is just going to boil down to, who’s in charge here? We get a lot of emails when people request a catalog. They’ll put a little comment in there. A lot of them are, “I’m looking for something my child wants to do.” Well, there’s a balance here. Yes, I want my children to enjoy doing schoolwork. It gives me great delight. But then, sometimes, they have to do what they don’t want to do. That’s kind of a balancing act there, too. Some families think, “The reason I homeschool is because I want my child to love what they’re doing.” But that’s not always going to be the case.

Hope: I think it will be a unique child that will always love math. With a lot of children that’s not going to be the thing. They’re going to need to learn math. It’s just a fact of life and this is how a lot of life progresses. As you grow up there’s things that may not delight your soul, but you still need to know.

Deb: It comes back to character training. Again, I’m not advocating staying with a curriculum that doesn’t meet all the other requirements. But if you if you’ve done your due diligence and it’s not a learning style… it’s not too easy… it’s not too hard… it’s within your physical capabilities… but you just don’t like it. Well, this is the time for us to grow in character.

Hope: Absolutely! These are the skills that when they have learned perseverance in this, then when they are grown, they can learn perseverance through their grown life, too, and everything that requires that.

Deb: Exactly. Because adulting is not a lot of fun.

Hope: It’s not! The last thing we thought about was motivation. It kind of ties into character. Often you can have hit all the things, but what’s the motivation to do it? For kids it’s appropriate and fair to say, “Not only are we going to say you need to do this, but we’re going to give you a reason to do it beyond just knowing the information.”

Deb: Because we work for a paycheck. None of our employees are doing it for fun. They’re having a good time, but they’re not doing it for fun. They’re going for the paycheck. Likewise, your children. When they really love it, if they love art, that’s rewarding itself. Some kids do like math, that’s rewarding.

Hope: I will say, as a whole, kids love Timberdoodle’s curriculum. So we’re not saying it’s not a fun program. It is a fun program. There’s a lot of fun involved, but at some point the fun stops, and you still have to do it.

Deb: So what are some motivators?

Hope: Growing up, one simple motivator we got was Friday Family Fun Night. For us it was movies. If you got your school list done by Friday, you got to be out watching the movie with the family. If you didn’t, you were in your room completing your list. That was a simple carrot to say, “Hey, get it done or this will be the consequence.”

For the little guys that we work with now, sometimes there are carrots and sometimes they are not. When you do school with them in the morning afterwards there are some “rewards” and fun toys that come out, and it’s a special play time with Grandma. After the school is completed when we do school in the afternoons, that’s not always the case. So you can have checks and balances. “Let’s do a little school now. Let’s do something fun. Let’s do a little school now. Now let’s move on the rest of our life.” It doesn’t all have to be scripted and exact.

Deb: When you guys were growing up we had you do chores. If you didn’t want to do your schoolwork, that’s okay. There’s plenty of jobs to do. You go out and do the dishes, pick up the living room, or whatever. When you’re ready, come in and do school work.

Hope: It’s amazing. We actually really wanted to do some school work.

Deb: They always wanted to do school work instead of chores! And we’re starting to do that with the kids. To say, “You know, you’re horsing around at the table. Why don’t you go in the living room and pick it up a little bit, and then you can come back out and do school work.” All of a sudden…

Hope: School is a privilege. In a lot of ways, school is a privilege. If you have too much energy, man, there’s so much that needs to be done around this place!

So hopefully that’s helpful to give you some ideas as you work through the rough spots in your school year to be able to keep the momentum going, and get a lot of enjoyment out of it, a lot of peace with it. Don’t fret about the small things.

Deb: Right. And if you have any questions email us at mail@timberdoodle.com, and we’re happy to try to answer them.

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A Day in the Life of Montana Timberdoodlers

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Shared By:

Sarah of Montana

Meet Our Family:

I’m Sarah, or Mama around here. We’ve got two girls, Snickerdoodle, age 3.5 and HoneyBunch, age 2. Dad works on office machines and is based at home, but sometimes has to drive long days. Snickerdoodle loves gymnastics, T. Rex, and pizza. HoneyBunch loves nuggets, triceratops, and dance parties. Mama loves Dad, parasaurolophus, and her kids.

Our Morning:

Mama wakes up around 6:30 to have some coffee and play some games in the quiet. Snickerdoodle and HoneyBunch get up around 7:15 and have yogurt and waffles for breakfast.

Monday we go to the library. Other mornings we try to sneak in some work after breakfast while we wait for the sun to get to the backyard and warm it up a little. Snickerdoodle likes Kumon Logic and Junior GeoStix  the most. HoneyBunch enjoys making a mess with the kid puzzle.

Once it gets warm, we try to spend a little time outside before lunch. It makes nap time a bit easier.

Our Afternoon:

After some eggs and toast for lunch, HoneyBunch goes down for a nap and Snickerdoodle and Mama get some more work done. Mathmathical Reasoning usually shows up here.

Once HoneyBunch wakes up, we do art or science together then more outside time.

Before dinner, we do some read-alouds.

Our Evening:

Snickerdoodle has started helping make dinner sometimes. Her best things are toast and cracking eggs. HoneyBunch tries to help too, but is less successful.

After dinner, we may relax with some Magic School Bus or a board game.

Favorite Timberdoodle Tool:

Wikki Stix have been a favorite tool and toy this year. Both kids love it!

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Timberdoodle Story #227

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Today’s Timberdoodle Story shared by:

Nicole of Kirkland, WA

What made you consider Timberdoodle for the first time?

I was looking for a big box curriculum that had Math-U-See in it. This math is a barometer test for me and called my attention to Timberdoodle and I researched rest of items in curriculum. Found this kit to be what I would have researched and bought separately on my own.

Before you decided to use Timberdoodle, what was your biggest obstacle or concern about using a Timberdoodle Curriculum Kit?

Cost.

What helped you overcome that?

Adding items al a carte. Realizing many of items could be reused or benefit other children in household. Value of learning and my time saved not doing this on my own was priceless.

If your friend decided to start homeschooling and felt overwhelmed, what would you tell her?

To tell me what her biggest concern/stressor was.

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A Day in the Life of Washington Timberdoodlers

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Shared By:

Natalie Norton, Wenatchee, WA

Meet Our Family:

My name is Natalie. I’m a wife to my high school sweetheart, Shawn. We have five amazing children; Karlee (16) , Jacob (14) , Lucas (7), Seth (3), and Magnolia (1). We are currently only homeschooling the younger three, while the older two are in public school.

Our days are spent making messes, helping mom in the kitchen and garden, playing trucks and making mud pies, and enjoying each other’s company. We’re a fun, chaotic family and we try not to take life too seriously!

Our Morning:

  • We tend to wake up and tidy our home-especially our school space.
  • Make a healthy breakfast.
  • Dive into our morning basket where we spend a a large chunk of time reading aloud.
  • Touch in math and phonics.
  • Outdoor play.
  • Lunch.
  • Finish any school work that needs to be done.

 

Our Afternoon:

We love to take afternoon walks to the local park and library. Sometimes we have some friends over for play dates.

The younger boys enjoy Minecraft (Surprising!) and jumping on the trampoline!

Our Evening:

Dinner (always different!), baths, books, and bed!

Favorite Timberdoodle Tool:

I have to say the Plus Plus Blocks are the big winner in our house!

More About Our Family:

We are a large family so our day to day is always a bit different. So many needs to be met can make it hard to have a routine all the time. We try, but we aren’t perfect and that’s what makes us great!

Follow Us on Instagram:

@chaotic7

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How to Review Your Timberdoodle Products

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Did you know we will award you for reviewing the products you order from Timberdoodle? It’s true! We will!

You can earn 20-50 Doodle Dollar Points per item for posting reviews on our website, or 100 Doodle Dollar Points for reviewing a Curriculum Kit. Each 20 points = $1 dollar off a future order!

Here’s How

First, make sure you understand what we’re looking for in a review.

We’re looking for reviews of items you purchased from Timberdoodle. Reviews should give specifics about what you or your child liked/didn’t like about the product reviewed. Each review must be unique and apply specifically to the product you are reviewing. We’re also looking for the review to have enough substance to be helpful to others, so please be sure to give us at least 3 sentencesClick here for more information on review standards and requirements.

Reviews are welcomed and encouraged on any of our resources, but Doodle Dollar points will only be awarded for reviews of products purchased from Timberdoodle that are priced at $5 or more, that were not purchased as damaged or closeout, and we must be able to verify purchase history. Most items on our website qualify for points. Items that qualify for points will show on the item’s page. You can see how many points you will earn for the item under the item’s price on the right. It will be shown as “You’ll earn (amount) Doodle Dollar Points.” A few products are exempt from earning Doodle Dollars. Items such as closeout, damaged sale, and select sale items do not qualify for points.

Next, login to your account.

Click on the little “head” icon in the upper right of any page.

That will take you to the login page which will ask for your email address and password. (If you’re already logged in, you will be taken straight to the Order History page.) If you have previously made an online Timberdoodle purchase, you will likely have an account already created for you. Orders on which an email address is provided automatically create an account with that email. If you don’t yet have a password, please Contact Us to set a password so you can access your account.

Check your order history.

Once you’ve logged in you’ll be taken to your Order History page. Click on an order number to see what items were included in that order.

Decide what item you would like to review.

Click on the name of an item to be taken to the Product Page. Scroll down the page until you get to the section that says Reviews.

Type your review (at least 3 sentences– more is even better!) into the Add Review box. Select a Star Rating. Add your name and location. (The default is your full name and city/state. Feel free to change that if you prefer to be more anonymous.)

Click the Choose Files button if you’d like to add a picture. We would love that!

Then click the Submit Review button.

Upon approval and publication of your review, the points are deposited into your account!

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Timberdoodle Story #226

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Today’s Timberdoodle Story shared by:

J. Bingham, homeschool mom of 7 (3 with special needs)

What made you consider Timberdoodle for the first time?

I’ve been homeschooling for many years, my oldest graduated last year. With my oldest I tried so many different things & struggled with most. This ability to personalize the kits to suit each of my children’s needs made Timberdoodle ideal. With so much of the curriculum being hands on activities & games my kids are in love. They beg to do “school” all of the time, even on weekends & during holiday breaks.

Before you decided to use Timberdoodle, what was your biggest obstacle or concern about using a Timberdoodle Curriculum Kit?

My biggest obstacle with Timberdoodle was the expense. We have 7 kids, 3 of whom have special needs, & my husband is a disabled veteran so money is tight.

What helped you overcome that?

This was our first year using Timberdoodle & we had some money from refinancing our home. We are trying to save up to be able to purchase Timberdoodle again for our next school year.

If your friend decided to start homeschooling and felt overwhelmed, what would you tell her?

I would tell her to try to stay calm & just let learning be fun. I would definitely suggest Timberdoodle’s curriculum kits because they not only help make learning fun, but they greatly reduce the stress of planning.

Is there anything unique about your family that you’d like to share with us?

We have a rather unique family. My husband is a disabled veteran & we have 7 children. Of our 7 children, 3 have special needs. Our 5-year-old son has cystic fibrosis, our 4-year-old daughter has severe autism and developmental delays, & our 2-year-old daughter has Aicardi Syndrome. Aicardi is a rare genetic disorder causing her to be born with part of her brain missing, no eyes, only one kidney, malformed ribs and vertebrae, & being deaf in one ear.

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Stages Emotions Cards

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Winner of the Tillywig Toy Awards and Family Choice Awards, Stages: Emotion Cards will help your pre-K student identify and discuss feelings and emotions. Emotion Cards provide parents a systematic way to develop emotional intelligence in their children. These cards will give you an organic way to foster discussions about a range of emotions, why the people feel that way, and the appropriate and inappropriate responses to these feelings.

Let’s take a look at Emotions by Stages.

Whereas the Feelings Flashcards that we’ve looked at have pictures on both sides with the emotion for you to label and talk about, Stages has gone a whole step further to give you some of the tools you’ll need to go more in-depth in discussing these emotions.

Bright and colorful, a variety of situations, this is where the Stages Emotions cards really shine.

You have, to begin with, the emotions themselves. Okay, so “disgusted.” There are a number of different pictures to represent disgust. So this guy’s disgusted, she’s disgusted, and so on. For your child who may have trouble generalizing the look or the response of the emotion, this will give them practice to read that face and see what they are feeling. On the back they have it labeled “disgusted” so that of you have any questions yourself, you will know.

Here’s some more. A bunch of shocked faces. Again, a wide variety, that way your child will begin to generalize and see how all these people feel this certain emotion.

Let’s look at the scenes here. On the back of each card they will have questions and conversation starters. If you’re tracking how your child does, they also have this ability. In the world of autism or other learning difficulties, you will likely want to be tracking this. Can they receptively label this? If I told them, “Find me the one that’s playing the board game… or find me the one that feels happy or give me the one that feels sad,” could they label that?  You have that tracking. If your child is really struggling here, you can track as they master each step. Or if they’re really young and these are all new skills for them, then as they master each one, you can track it here on the card.

The questions are where this set just becomes so valuable. Looking at this card:

  • How do they each feel? Why?
  • Who is winning? Who is losing?
  • What might happen next?
  • Do you like to play games?
  • What is your favorite game to play? How do you feel when you lose? How do you feel when you win?

Many emotions in the answers as you begin can be very simple. For your young child, she feels happy, or she feels sad. But as your child progresses, then their ability to tell the story of the picture and to imagine what the child might be feeling or the grown-up might be feeling and why and what the outcome will be, their social/emotional skills will just flourish with this.

This one I think is it just classic for the depth that you can go into. How are they feeling? How do they each feel and why? They feel happy. She feels happy. She feels happy because they’re making cookies. Longer into this process your child should be able to look at this with more discernment and understanding and say, “I think the Mom feels happy because her daughter is breaking the egg all by herself into the bowl without making a mess, and I think the daughter is happy and also serious because she is worried that she might get some shells in the bowl.” Then when you have the next question of what might happen next? The simple answer would be, “I think they are going to eat cookies.” The complex answer is, “I think she’s going to mess up, and I think she’ll crumble some egg shell in the bowl, and then I think she’ll cry, but I think the mom will comfort her and say, ‘That’s okay, and we’ll dump it out and start over and make a new batch of cookies.'”

Again, the possibilities with this at your child’s ability to develop social/emotional intelligence is just phenomenal and exciting. This set will give you such jump start on teaching a child social/emotional intelligence.

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