Back to School Tips Featured on ABC13
I am thrilled to share Back To School Success Strategies with our Houston community!
http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/video?id=8762205
I am thrilled to share Back To School Success Strategies with our Houston community!
http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/video?id=8762205
Back to school! Its that time of year that makes moms happy and sad; happy to start new routines and sad about the energy and organization it can take to get your family going. Throughout the month of August we are featuring organized moms who will help get you started back to school with the toughest tasks.
Moms are challenged by making lunch nutritious, easy to make, and enjoyable for their kids. Here are some solutions for you.
Lunch-making blues….
I dread making those lunches every morning as much as my boys dread returning to school. Alternating PB&J and salami sandwiches weekly gets monotonous quickly—for the mom making the lunch and for the kids eating it! Last year, I surfed the web and collected some great new ideas to make lunches a little more exciting. Following are some hits with my kids:
Instead of a sandwich, I had the deli counter cut lunch meat in one thick slice, which I then cubed and packed with cubed cheese, toothpicks, and crackers. (Toothpicks are huge with my kids—maybe because I have three boys—they love when I condone the stabbing of anything) Wraps are another hit—the same ingredients as a boring sandwich, but wrapped in a tortilla—I spread cream cheese or Laughing Cow Swiss, then the lunchmeat, shredded cheese and “salad” (my boys’ term for lettuce, spinach, etc). I am sure the “salad” gets brushed off immediately at school, but I try!
Also, varying the bread on a basic sandwich was a hit. We used thin bagels, English muffins, and even corn muffins.
Other main dishes include hummus with pita chips and carrots, cold pizza, cold pepperoni rolls, and leftover meatballs (again with toothpicks). If you have a thermos, baked potatoes, soup, or any pasta can be a great change on a cooler day.
Some extras that were a hit last year: beef jerky, peanut butter crackers, chips and dip, veggies and ranch, pretzels with the new individual cream cheese packets, yogurt with granola, trail mix, popcorn, and zucchini chocolate chip muffins (I have a great recipe for these—my kids have yet to discover there is a vegetable in there!)
Of course, I always add a fruit and small treat to brighten their day.
Shawna McGrath is a stay at home mom of three boys, part time Math and English tutor, and enjoys believing her kids eat all the food in their lunch, not just the cookies.
Pictured above is the all new Rubbermaid lunch kit named LunchBlox. As a mom and Gigi (grandmother), I love the gift of LuncBlox from Rubbermaid! As an organizer, lots of rectangular containers in bright colors make a difference. Little separate compartments for different items and an ice block to keep it all cold make it easy to keep lunch together and make it the night before. It’s also BPA free and dish washer safe. All of Shawna’s suggestions will fit in the new LunchBlox. Making lunch will be so much more fun, nutritious and enjoyable now! What lunch will you pack in your LunchBlox?
Certified Professional Organizer Ellen Delap is a fan of all sorts of containers!
Back to school time brings backpacks by the back door, papers flying in from kids, and upcoming activities, back to school night and more. Create a command center and landing strip that helps you control the information and stuff.
Do you have a family command center idea to share? What works for you?
Need more ideas? Visit my pinterest board Back to School. http://pinterest.com/EllenDelap/back-to-school/
Back to school! Its that time of year that makes moms happy and sad; happy to start new routines and sad about the energy and organization it can take to get your family going. Throughout the month of August we are featuring organized moms who will help get you started back to school with the toughest tasks.
Moms are challenged to get everyone out the door on time with a smile. These ideas can get everyone’s day started off right.
Morning school routine
The most important thing I do to make school mornings run smoothly is to do ALMOST everything the night before. My goal is for everything to be done except for obviously breakfast, getting dressed, and brushing teeth. Here are some of the things I do the night before that make our mornings more manageable:
* Unload the dishwasher – I loathe spending extra time in the kitchen late at night when it feels like I’ve been in there ALL DAY, but it’s so worth it to start the morning with a clean kitchen. The breakfast dishes are a quick rinse and load and then I’ve got a clean kitchen again.
* Pack lunches, fruit break, water bottles – another kitchen chore that I despise doing at night, BUT it’s even worse to deal with the next morning, so I make myself get it done!
* Set out backpacks, shoes, and any other items that are going to school that day
* Lay school clothes out as I’m tucking kids in at night
When I slack off and don’t do one or more of these chores the night before, the result is a scattered, hectic morning – not a good start to the day!
Another trick that works for me is to require that the kids eat, dress, put on shoes, and brush teeth and hair before they watch any cartoons. They are motivated to get these small chores done and they enjoy having 10 minutes or so of TV time before we head to school.
Meredith Delap is a stay at home mom of three. She enjoys reading, the beach, and peace and quiet.
Fall is around the corner and now is the time to establish successful strategies and routines. This time of year we are ready to begin again, even more so than at the new year. When families work together new routines, the results can be amazing! Communication is the key. No one likes to be told what to do whether you are an adult, teen or even a young child. Asking questions can make the difference on helping your children be successful in school and working together on solutions for family responsibilities and routines. Here are some questions to help your family get a great start this fall. Host a family meeting to collaborate on this.
What are your personal goals for this next year? Help your child establish a minimum goal for one area by asking what specific actions they will take to accomplish this goal. Ask them how you can help them reach the goal. Share with them one goal you have too and ask for their help.
What is the best way for you to keep up with your calendar, recording your homework and other activities? Families can set up a month at a glance calendar in a prominent place for everyone to see or use a digital calendar and print out the month at a glance. Each child will need their own planner for use at school, either a month at a glance, week at a glance or a spiral notebook to write in all assignments, important dates and other details. Parents need a reliable planner system too.
What is your best way to keep up with papers this fall? Some ideas might be one binder with tabbed slash pockets, one folder for each subject and a homework folder, a small box file, or an accordion file with one pocket for each subject. Remember, paper management is a learned skill and very important to practice.
What ways to study help you learn best? Auditory learners learn well with background music, softly playing in the background. Kinesthetic learners learn well with flashcards, re-writing and movement. Visual learners learn best with color, highlighting and underlining. Minimize distractions by keeping study time out of your child’s room. Check grades weekly online with your students asking them to assess what is working for studying.
Ask all your family members to brainstorm all the stuff that must be done each week, including trash, dinner preparation, dishes, laundry, and more. Then ask each family member which task they can do best or which they prefer. When you work from your strengths and/or work on what you prefer, everyone does a better job. Ask for family members to partner in getting these jobs done too, so that no one person has to work alone. Record their responsibilities on a chart and post this again in a prominent place. Everyone has come together to work together as a team.
Start this year off with a plan for everyone in your family. Keep the strategies going with encouragement and enthusiasm, hosting family meetings to continue this dialogue and communicate about other important family values. Starting new or getting back to routines makes a difference for everyone.
Do you say, I would rather jump off a cliff, go to the dentist, or even run away when faced with organizing? One of the most basic emotions we have is fear when getting organized. Whether we fear being shamed, we fear loss, or we fear defeat, we must acknowledge this. In order to overcome your organizing fear, we must address where this comes from.
Have you overcome your organizing fear? What made a difference for you?
It’s almost that time to set your college freshman off! It is a bit scary, a bit exciting and a bit overwhelming for you and for them. It takes time to get ready for freshman year, so now is the time to get started. Here are a few tips for organizing your college freshman.
Do you have ideas to share with new college freshman?
Cell Phones for Soldiers wants to turn old cell phones into more than 12 million minutes of prepaid calling cards for U.S. troops stationed overseas.
To do so, Cell Phones for Soldiers wants to collect 50,000 cell phones each month through a network of more than 3,000 collection sites across the country. Since 2004, Cell Phones for Soldiers has provided over 150 million minutes of talk time to soldiers and their families.
The process includes donating and refurbishing the used cell phones. The refurbished phones are sold on the secondary market. Each cell phone donated is the equivalent of a 60 minute calling card. Monetary donations can also be made on the website too. Donations should include the phone and battery, and if available chargers too. No instructions or boxes please.
PostNet Kingwood and Professional-Organizer.com are partnering to host a drop off site in Kingwood from July 1 – July 31. PostNet Kingwood is located at 4321 Kingwood Drive in the HEB Shopping Center in Kingwood. Drop off your used cell phones and make a difference!
Not in the Kingwood, TX area but want to donate? You can visit the Cell Phones for Soldiers site and enter your zip code. There are 8 sites to donate in Houston.
Anyone can request calling cards for their soldier by using the website; however, they will need the APO/FPO military mailing address of their soldier: http://www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com
Please remove the data on your phones prior to sending them in using the free data eraser link that is provided by the Recycling Partner. This link provides a hard factory reset, and will delete your contacts and existing data on the phone. http://securetradein.com/dataeraser
To learn more about Cell Phones for Soldiers visit www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com
Tackling toys to many is not a tiny area! But if you tackle it in one hour segments, it gets the job done!
Kids play with toys when they are not ovewhelmed by the quantity. Think about a kindergarten classroom. There are 25 kids and not even 25 toys. So less is more in this space. If you have new toys, you can save them for holiday toy drives. If you have missing parts, just keep a bin of all strays until the parts are rounded up. Summer is great time to organize this area with your kid’s help. This is a teachable skill to be organized and to declutter.
Have black garbage bags with you and your timer. Invite your kids to help and set the timer for 15 minutes. In that time, ask your kids to donate what they don’t love, what they want to share with others, and what is no longer age appropriate. Drop these into the bags, filling only until easily carried to the car. Have your kids drop off the items with you.
Set your timer for 15 more minutes, 3 more times, working around the room. At the end of the sessions, bring the items to the car and be sure to drop them off later that day.
You may have a few keepsake toys to store. Purchase 66 quart bins, with latches to secure closing, to store in the attic.
How many hours will this take? I suggest 2, 3 or 4 one hour sessions to get the job done. Breaking this job into small units makes it happen.
Organizing a kid friendly space means having them have access to their toys. Here are two creative resources for you to use. Busy Boxes from Container Store make rolling toy bins with different size containers. IKEA has Trofast tiered units to help organize toys.
http://www.containerstore.com/shop/toyStorage/boxesCases?productId=10000647
http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/categories/series/19027/?pageNumber=0
Remember to label to keep your toys systems and storage in order. Pictures are a great way to label too!
You have a year (or more) of your child’s homework, art work and photos. Your kids have worked hard and it is a challenge to let go of what seems like an overwhelming quantity of art, papers, and work. This is a great time to evaluate what to keep and what to let go. Kid art may not seem like a tiny area, but making this a manageable one hour project will help you move forward.
I would love to learn how your art tackling is coming!
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