Sunday, August 28, 2011

End of an era

Our house of eight years is being demolished tomorrow… We moved here when the children were little and we’ve really had lots of good times within these walls.

We love the neighbours, the area and the orientation of the block. So whilst we outgrew the house we couldn’t justify the expense of renovating and fixing it’s many faults. It makes total sense to knock it down and rebuild.

Friends ask if I’m sad to see it go, and honestly NO! It’s been a quirky house to live in, there’s a reason why it was a cheap buy. Dysfunctional floor plan, dated exterior, no insulation. It’s a long list that only becomes apparent when you live in the house. We tried to make it work, but really the only thing for it is a wrecking ball.

It’s taken months to get this point, choosing a design, the construction company, the finishes. The endless packing and moving to a rented house. So whilst friends wonder why we’re not sad we know we’re just over it. We know the new house will be a much better place to pick up where we left off.

In the meantime the demolition site provided a great venue for a 12yo birthday party!

Birthday bannerIMG_2885IMG_2880da renovators

Friday, July 22, 2011

Parenting Gifted Kids Week - More like a lifetime!

This is a long, self indulgent and wordy post inspired by SENG's National Parenting Gifted Children Week July 17 - 23, 2011. Please feel free to give it a miss if it bores you or you don't believe in "gifted".

When I first started this blog it was a space to vent the frustrations we experienced with schooling and parenting my gifted son. I figured not many people wanted to read about this and instead turned to the New South Wales Association for Gifted Children (NSWAGTC)and other organisations for support. My blog languished and I eventually started posting recipes and quilty stuff here.This stuff makes me happy and gives me a place to focus on me and my creativity.

Back to the kids though, it quickly became apparent that the NSWAGTC are hugely under resourced and that Gifted Education in NSW is in a state of flux. There are policies and guidelines and then there's the reality. Schools just don't have the resources and teachers don't get the training to deal with the 30 kids in their class and the myriad labels and conditions. I took matters into my own hands...

We went on a long overseas holiday, leaving school behind was one of the best things I could have done for the kids. On our return in a new school year, new teacher and different set of expectations things were much better. We went on camps and workshops with other gifted kids and their families. Suddenly being different was normal :-)

I started a local support group, providing emotional and practical "lived through it, not a professional" support online and by phone. We meet monthly with other families and try to arrange activities that the children would enjoy together. It is hugely rewarding and cathartic at the same time. I still remember the relief I felt when I spoke to someone for the first time and they told me that my kid was normal - for a gifted kid.

I got heavily involved in their schools, joined the P&C committees, fundraised, baked cakes and sold raffle tickets, I teach Ethics Classes. I advocated for resources and opportunities for all children, not just the top 10%. Being involved in the process for Merit Selection of teaching staff was a real eye opener and made me appreciate the constraints and challenges faced by our principals. I have so much respect for them and the teachers that work in our public school system. I hoped they understood that I want to work together as a team for the best outcome for my children and their classmates. It helps when the teacher is open to this.

Three years down the track my son is about to complete primary school, having been selected for a gifted program these past two years and now a selective high school were he will continue to mix with like minded teenagers and have subjects available at a level that suits his learning style.

Things are looking rosy, it hasn't always been a smooth ride and I definitely don't like what's happening in selective schools as more and more coached and tutored children enter the system. But that's another can of worms! We also have the bumpy teenage years ahead with my gifted daughter.

By making myself available to others embarking on the "gifted merry go round" I hope I can give others the same insight and pass on the resources and tactics that worked for us. Every child is different though, so what works for one may not work for the other. I know this is true even for my two.

If after reading this and you suspect your child is a little different to their age peers and want to know more and especially if you are worried about where things are headed, I urge you to consider through the following from the NSWGATC website.

AND TALK TO SOMEONE about it! You will feel much better, I promise xx

Characteristics of Gifted Children

General intellectual ability
•is an avid reader
•has avid interest in science or literature
•provides very alert, rapid answers to questions
•has a wide range of interests
•is secure emotionally
•is venturesome, wanting to do new things
•tends to dominate peers or situations
•is an entrepreneur - readily makes money on various projects or activities
•needs little outside control - applies self discipline
•is resourceful - solving problems by ingenious methods
•is creative in new ideas, seeing associations, pursuing innovations
•displays a great curiosity about objects, situations or events
•has the capacity to look into things and be puzzled
•is involved with many exploratory type activities
•reveals originality in oral and written expression
•is perceptually open to his or her environment
•displays a willingness to accept complexity
•has the capacity to use knowledge and information other than to memorise
•shows superior judgement in evaluating things
•is a good guesser
•makes good grades in most subjects
•learns rapidly, easily and efficiently
•uses a lot of commonsense
•retains and uses information which has been heard or read
•uses a large number of words easily and accurately
•asks many questions of a provocative nature
•has a power of abstraction, conceptualisation and synthesis
•has an interest in cause-effect relations
•has a liking for structure, order and consistency
•has a power of concentration, an intense attention that excludes all else
•is persistent
•has a high energy level
•is independent
•is friendly and outgoing




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Specific academic aptitude
•shows similar characteristics to general intellectual ability but concentrated around one or a few fields
•has a long attention span in areas of interest
•learns rapidly, easily and with less repetition in one or a few specific areas (probably not all subject areas)
•likes or loves one or a few areas of knowledge
•likes to study some subjects more than others
•spends time voluntarily beyond ordinary assignments on projects of interest to him or her
•is able to extend learning from these key areas to various situations somewhat unrelated in orientation
•is able to show broad perspective on one or more subject areas
•is able to judge own and others' relative abilities in key areas of interest
•seeks assistance of others beyond his or age peers in extending knowledge in areas of interest




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Creative thinking and production
•is fluent in producing and elaborating on ideas
•makes unusual associations between remote ideas
•is flexible in thinking patterns
•senses when problems exist
•acts spontaneously, intuitively
•tolerates ambiguity and uncertainty
•senses inconsistencies and discontinuities
•readily guesses and makes hypotheses
•juggles or redefines elements of a problem or task
•can show intense concentration on a task
•retains own ideas in a discussion or collaboration
•provides multiple solutions or responses to problems
•is uninhibited in expression, sometimes radical
•is intellectually playful, interested in fantasy, imagination
•always trying to adapt or improve things
•has a keen sense of humour, seeing humour in situations others don't
•doesn't mind being different
•doesn't accept authoritarian pronouncements without own judgement
•asks provocative questions, challenges parents, teachers, written and other authorities
•is bored with memorisation and recitation
•displays energy, sometimes disruptively
•produces unexpected, sometimes "silly" responses
•is considered, and perhaps resented, by some peers as "crazy"
•can show unusual degrees of originality, concentration and persistent hard work on projects that capture their interest and imagination




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Leadership
•can stimulate and arouse others
•organises others
•recognises skills and abilities possessed by others
•interacts with others easily showing social skills
•recognises and can articulate the goals of a group
•can articulate ideas clearly
•can listen to others empathetically
•understands how people feel and how groups function
•can give directions clearly and effectively
•exercises authority reliably and responsibly
•can adopt non-leadership roles within a group
•can establish the mood of a group
•supports others in a group when appropriate
•can coordinate the work of several individuals
•is often asked for ideas and suggestions
•is looked to by others when something must be decided




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Psychomotor ability
•is rhythmic
•is athletic
•likes to play physically
•has a suitable body build
•is coordinated, balanced and confident in physical activities
•is inventive in constructing or modifying games
•is energetic
•is able to understand the intellectual aspects of psychomotor activities
•demonstrates endurance, stamina and persistence in physical activities
•demonstrates prowess in physical activities common amongst age peers




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Visual and performing arts

Music
•has good sense of rhythm
•is well-coordinated
•discriminates musical and other sounds well
•understands musical relationships
•enjoys musical activities and demonstrates musical feeling
•shows tonal memory
•responds readily to rhythm, melody and harmony
•uses music to express feeling or experience
•makes up original tunes
•enjoys dance and dramatic activities with musical elements

Dramatics
•demonstrates interest and enjoyment in dramatic activities
•readily shifts into role of another character, animal or object
•uses voice to reflect changes in mood
•demonstrates understanding of conflict when acting out a dramatic event
•communicates feelings by means of facial expressions, gestures and bodily movements
•enjoys evoking emotional responses from listeners
•demonstrates ability to dramatise feelings and experiences
•brings a dramatic situation to a climax with a well-timed ending when telling a story

Art
•draws a variety of objects
•puts depth into drawing, showing planning and good proportion
•treats art seriously and enjoys it
•shows originality in modes of undertaking art
•is willing to try out new materials and experiences
•pursues art in spare time
•uses art to express feelings and experiences
•is interested in other people's art, both appreciating it and criticising it
•likes to model three dimensionally with clay, soap carving, plasticine etc

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Mucking around with apple core templates

I picked up some apple core foundation paper templates at the quilt show yesterday. I was itching to try them as the demo looked so easy... Should have paid more attention to the technique!








I clearly remember being told that the concave curves didn't need clipping but I couldn't work out any other way to get these to turn under.






I then appliquéd the whole lot down onto a solid blue fabric.





Looking pretty cute so far...






Added some accent stitching and followed Toni Coward's tutorial here to make a little zippered pouch. http://tonicoward.blogspot.com/2010/05/zippered-pouch-tutorial.html





The lining and back of the pouch is also from the Denyse Schmidt Fairgrounds range. The middle green apple core is Moda. The blue solid is Prima from Spotlight.





I'm pleased as punch as this will be a perfect present for Fia's friend!
Don't you love it when things turn out as they should?

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Quilt To Give Sew Along


Image from Nancy Ziemen's blog

My taste in quilt fabrics has really matured over the past 10 years. I used to rush to buy anything I could lay my hands on. Big pieces for backings, anything on sale, solids, kiddy prints, small prints and large gaudy prints.
As I'm packing up the sewing room in preparation for the big move I'm considering what to do with these fabrics I don't love... They are taking up precious storage space and they no longer inspire me to sew.
I could give them away or I could sew them up into simple quilts for charity.
I came across a great site today encouraging quilters to sew Column Quilts for charity. I like this technique, simple and effective. The solid fabrics pull the quilt together. I may enlist the help of some quilting buddies for this project :-)
Want to join me??

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Now why didn't I think of that?



from this blog
DIY Chalkboard Paint Ideas

For an inexpensive and simple way to label your jars and storage containers, take inspiration from this pic and use a splash of chalkboard paint and some chalk. The best thing is if you ever change the contents of the jar, you just rub off the label and write the new title in its place. Genius.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Quilting continued...




Only 2 more meetings before we have to have this quilt finished.


We've all been so busy studying, working, mothering...


Handquilting the hexagons is getting easier but I still don't like the feel of the fabric grain being all over the place. The edges are particularly difficult.




Not long to go on this one. Then I can focus on my entry for next year. M made some gorgeous blocks for me as a surprise reward for all the handquilting :-) I'll have to scan and add them tomorrow, it's been a long day.


PS. This is a link to last year's quilt featured in Down Under Quilts, pg 13

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Pin Cushions


I'm officially over my magnetic pin cushions, it's so hard to grab a pin quickly and everything gets wrapped in threads. So I decided to use some scraps and make myself a nice solid one to sit next to the machine. As I had run out of fibre fill I cut up pieces of wool wadding and used that instead. It works like a charm, the wool has plenty of body and enough weight to stop it from sliding about... Now I can keep all my pins and needles sorted so I can always find the right one for the job :-)



Fia made me this cute coffee cup pin cushion earlier this year.
I topped up the filling with some wool wadding and it is now nice and solid too.
This is the one I'll use next to me when I'm hand quilting... I love the button she bought secretly for me whilst on holidays!