Tuesday, August 28, 2007

guerrilla gardeners

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guerrilla gardens - hear the show here (AKA "creeping gardens, and other popular crimes")

interviews - beatrice ekoko, climate change challenge project manager, environment hamilton
- andy brown, guerrilla gardener, toronto public space committee

book review - the prophet of yonwood, by Jeanne DuPrau, reviewed by Bronwyn

music - fall on me, REM, Lifes Rich Pageant

tech - beatrice and randy

"...they should not play life, or study it merely, while the community supports them at this expensive game, but earnestly live it from beginning to end. How could youths better learn to live than by at once trying the experiment of living?"
Henry David Thoreau

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

wild dining

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THIS WEEK'S SHOW:

download it here: http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=24367

interview - Dieter Staudinger, Spiritual Psychotherapist (pictured with the kids)

music - How Deep In The Valley, Sarah Harmer, I'm a Mountain

tech - beatrice ekoko, randy kay

"Education ought to be viewed as a process of development and exploration, rather than as one of repressing a child's instincts and inculcating obedience and discipline. Children learn best when they feel good about themselves, others, and the world. The best education, therefore, would orient the child to the world, facilitating the child's learning from others and from his or her environment. Furthermore, it would engage children as fully as possible (taking advantage of all the senses), encouraging them to develop and value their own abilities as well as to cooperate with others. Education, that is, should be active, noncompetitive, and as nondirective as possible, relying heavily on children's natural curiosity."

Free Women of Spain, Martha A. Ackelsberg.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

carpet crawlers

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Bugging the Entomologist
Wednesday, August 8, 2007


interview
- Marvin Gunderman, Technical Coordinator, Curator of Entomology, Insect Taxonomist, Dept. of Biology, McMaster University

music - "carpet crawlers", Genesis, Lamb Lies Down

edit - randy

download as MP3/Podcast: http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=24178

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Final Harry Potter tome is "greenest book in publishing history"

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This is a neat piece of information fro those who environmentalists who love Harry Potter;

The final installment of the mugglicious series is said to be the greenest book in publishing history -- a good thing, since it's set sales records at retailers like Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble. Sixteen publishers around the world used eco-friendly paper for the edition, including U.S. publisher Scholastic, which went the conventional route for the last Harry book and faced a boycott as a result. In all, says Markets Initiative, a Vancouver-based group that helps publishers go green, the switch for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows has saved nearly 200,000 trees and avoided almost 8,700 tons of carbon dioxide emissions.
This from the Daily Grist, July 20th

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Book Review

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Discipline without Distress; 135 tools for raising caring, responsible children without time-out, spanking, punishment or bribery by Judy Arnall (2007)


If you've run out of ideas on what to do when your kid is driving you up the wall and hanging him out the window by his ankles is looking like a reasonable thing to do, if you feel like you've forgotten any wise parenting knowledge you ever had, or if the case is that you've never had any in the first place then Discipline Without Distress by Judy Arnall could be the book for you.


If you can be self-disciplined enough to plough through its many pages, you will discover therein, a veritable gold mine of helpful tips to assist you in your parenting journey.

“Parenting is the hardest job on earth,” Arnall doesn't need to tell us that but the premisses of her book underlines that which we often fail to see; We are not raising children. We are raising adults.”

And what we do today, how we respond to our children in the immediate, corresponds to the adult of tomorrow.

So what Arnall advices us to focuses on is relationship building with our child. This is the most important idea in the entire book. The parenting relationship is a love relationship; “ Just remember Newton's law: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. There are two people in your relationship, you and your child, and at the end of the day, your relationship is all you have,” warns Arnall.

What is necessary then, is that you treat your child “with the respect you would afford an adult in today's society.”

Punishment is not part of the picture- you can discipline your child and maintain good communication without it.

Which brings me to the word discipline; for many its not a comfortable word. It often connotes the idea of control, can bring up painful memories of spankings and yellings, it can remind us that we are fearful our children have no regard for our values!

But Arnall brings new meaning to the word- it's about respecting each other, it's about a democratic nurturing way of parenting. It's also about self discipline for both parent and child. It's fundamental to living in a healthful relationships with others and we can all learn it in a kind and loving way.


An in depth look at anger triggers, behaviour problems, the need to model what we expect our children to be like, all these are invaluable tools and advice for the adult interested in preserving intact the precious parent child bond.

By BEE



copyright 2007 by Judy Arnall jarnall@shaw.ca

www.professionalparenting.ca