Flashback: How to entertain your young children during a quarantine So many stories center around 2020; having lived in Beijing since the summer of 2019, ours was particularly memorable.
Questions Families Must Ask Before Moving The key to making any relocation run as smoothly as possible: communication. You and your spouse must talk to each other and listen to one another, even — and especially — if they are saying things you don’t want to hear.
Periods & Puberty: A Parent's Primer for "Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret" Anyone who grew up reading Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret will love this movie.
I live in Orlando, but I can't afford to take my kids to Disney World all the time. Here's how we spend a cheap but entertaining day in Disney Springs instead. When my family moved to Orlando, an annual pass to Disney World (which runs between $400 and $1,300 a person) was out of our budget. But there are plenty of ways to enjoy the magic without spending a lot of money. Disney Springs, the shopping, dining, and entertainment....
Oakland's Lynchings In 1950 and 1951, the Ku Klux Klan brutally murdered two young Black men from Oakland who worked in the citrus fields. For decades, the stories were passed down in whispers—if they were shared at all. Now, the town is finally, publicly, acknowledging what happened 70 years ago.
E-Learning Lessons for Schools to Retain The answer, according to school leaders at October’s Jing International School Expo panel, is empathy, flexibility, and a multi-pronged approach that looks at all stakeholders in the school community: students, parents, and staff.
Baba’s Not a Buffoon: Dads Play a Big Role in Early Childhood Development The trope of the absentee or deadbeat dad is so pervasive that it often seems like a lazy way to motivate your protagonist. Think of your top five movies and then try to name one whose dad is a good influence, or even alive.
Navigating a Rare Illness in Another Country When my husband was six years old, a tonsillectomy almost killed him.
20 for 20: Great Wall Explorer William Lindesay A perk to working at Jingkids International is that I often was also writing for The Beijinger, our grown-up sister magazine. Lindesay's interview was part of both publications celebrating their 25th anniversary:
Community Engagement: Get out of your box This article was the sixth in a series of Audience Building articles on Ms in the Biz, a wonderful publication that uplifted multiple women in entertainment's voices at a time that we needed it.
A Tweet-Up for Tribes at the Taper The context the speakers gave to ASL, BSL (British Sign Language), the five years of research Nina Raine performed while writing the play and cultures reassured me that all the different experiences are as faithful to reality as a six-person play can represent.
ARTmageddon LA: Sept 29-30th Running parallel to Carmageddon II, this two-day citywide celebration of the arts encourages Angelenos to stay out of their cars and, instead, walk-bike-metro to their local galleries, theaters, music venues, museums and more.