We've made a short video that visually encapsulates how our childhood memories are nothing like what kids are experiencing now. It shows how time and place changes children's memories and experiences of growing up, and how our childhood's aren't very relatable to what kids go through these days. We hope you enjoy it (:
CM Grew and Gone
CM are our childhood memories, centimetres of how tall we grew and bits of how life as kids used to be...and how they live now.
Wednesday, 5 November 2014
Tuesday, 14 October 2014
Environment of future generation
Here I am guessing what childhood of the future would be like.
Alreday, we have young children highly advanced with technology such as smart phones, iPads, Tablets etc etc.
When these children grow and create another generation, wouldnt there be more diverse development in life? Totally different environment is expected! Hologram classroom? May be something like in movie Wall-E, where children are taught of alphabets in virtual classrooms with robots? Smart-phone may be replaced by another mobile service. We might even not need to use recording device to learn? Children making friends could be more or less physical and social than now? And we might say like the old blokes out there "back in the days when I was your age..."
Potentials are diverse. However as important these potentials would be, I suppose we would still have balance in life. I may sound conservative with that line. But still now we live in highly technologically advanced than ever before, yet we manage to live with traditional schemes and traditional way of living. May be this is not as traditional as thousands of years ago but we still use different aspects of our sense and skills/talents to survive.
Australia = great place to call home
I think Australia is a wonderful country to
grow up in and we’re very lucky to call Australia home. The lifestyle here is
great for families with enough space and time to enjoy the beautiful beaches,
national parks, forests, parks + much more.
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Shelly Beach, NSW |
The culture of multiculturalism is instilled
from a young age, where children grow up in a classroom with many kids with
diverse backgrounds. Children don’t discriminate others for their race or where
they come from, they learn about different cultures at school (e.g Australian
Day, Multicultural Day, Harmony Day), play and get along with one another from
a young age.
Aussie kids have the time and space to try
out different sports at home, school or the local park or pool to suit their
interests. Australia is a very sporty country, there is a huge variety of sport
available for every size, age and skill levels – volleyball, cricket, bin
cricket, hand ball, tennis, badminton and how could we forget swimming!
Aussie kids have fun learning about the
unique flora and fauna in Australia – Kookaburras, Blue Tongue Lizards and
other furry animals visit your yard (and yes there are some interesting deadly creatures too so be aware and look out!)
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Kookaburra |
Monday, 13 October 2014
Omg! Texting is ruining grammar skills
A new study confirms what many parents suspect; the more kids send and receive texts, the worse their grammar skills become.
With "the culture of mobile communication — quick back and forth — inevitably, there are compromises on traditional, cultural writing," said S. Shyam Sundar, professor of communications and co-director of Pennsylvania State University's Media Effects Research Laboratory, which conducted the study.
"Techspeak," as Sundar and his research partner Drew P. Cingel call it, has become so routine and prevalent among young users that it's eroding their foundation of basic grammar.
"Routine use of textual adaptations by current and future generations of 13-to-17-year-olds may serve to create the impression that this is normal and accepted use of the language and rob this age group of a fundamental understanding of standard English grammar," they said in their published findings.
Basically, kids aren't able to "code switch" — shift between standard grammar and the abbreviations used in text messages. Those abbreviations have essentially become the words for them.
Adults not raised on text-friendly abbreviations in their formative years are able to shift between formal and informal language, whereas kids consuming a steady diet of "textual adaptations" aren't.
Results show broad support for a general negative relationship between the use of techspeak in text messages and scores on a grammar assessment. Linguists aren't particularly disturbed by the trend, Sundar said. "The linguists will tell you the language is very dynamic."
True, words that were once dismissed as just catchy lyrics among certain demographics have made it into the mainstream — and into the dictionary.
The researchers had kids ages 10 to 14 take a grammar test. And it turned out those who sent or received texts recently performed worse on the exam.
The play deficit: Without the freedom to play, they will never grow up
The decline in opportunity to play has also been accompanied by a decline in empathy and a rise in narcissism, both of which have been assessed since the late 1970s with standard questionnaires given to normative samples of college students. Empathy refers to the ability and tendency to see from another person’s point of view and experience what that person experiences. Narcissism refers to inflated self-regard, coupled with a lack of concern for others and an inability to connect emotionally with others. A decline of empathy and a rise in narcissism are exactly what we would expect to see in children who have little opportunity to play socially. Children can’t learn these social skills and values in school, because school is an authoritarian, not a democratic setting and nor can they learn these from looking at screens whole day.
Sunday, 12 October 2014
Heroes from the childhood
For a long time (I kept this for eight years of my life) I have wanted to become a Veterinarian practitioner -yes now I know that this had been quite atypical of a child, not changing their future wannabe job thing for that long. I wanted to head to Africa, Serrengeti and Madagascar those wild zones and live in there making friends with animals. I still remember dreaming about this haha. Well, as a result Tippi Degre was like the one of my idol and hero!
A seven year old who play, drink, sleep, eat, talk and basically live with animal friend out in the wild? I remember I envied her so much I even used to begggggg on mum to buy me that book "Tippi- my book of Africa" and i read it over and over again so many times haha. With this I came across an article explaining what shes been upto after her childhood check it out at http://www.buzzfeed.com/rachelzarrell/the-real-life-cady-heron-who-grew-up-in-africa-tippi-degre?s=mobile#1r6cvbt.
But I also wonder, besides the child animation and movie character, what heroes are children surrounded by? Kpop stars like Psy who sang Gangnam style? Harry potter? The Pope? Yet, till now Idolisation of a subject seems very important building up childhood of a person's life. So tell us, who was your idol?
A seven year old who play, drink, sleep, eat, talk and basically live with animal friend out in the wild? I remember I envied her so much I even used to begggggg on mum to buy me that book "Tippi- my book of Africa" and i read it over and over again so many times haha. With this I came across an article explaining what shes been upto after her childhood check it out at http://www.buzzfeed.com/rachelzarrell/the-real-life-cady-heron-who-grew-up-in-africa-tippi-degre?s=mobile#1r6cvbt.
But I also wonder, besides the child animation and movie character, what heroes are children surrounded by? Kpop stars like Psy who sang Gangnam style? Harry potter? The Pope? Yet, till now Idolisation of a subject seems very important building up childhood of a person's life. So tell us, who was your idol?
“We didn’t have those back in the day…”
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Dial radio |
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TV from the 90s |
Imagine if you told the kids today, “we
didn’t have those back in the day…” – no mobile phones, flat screen TVs or the
internet, it may sound like a foreign idea to children these days too. It might already
be hard for us to imagine a world without the technology we use nowadays but
another decade maybe it’ll be even feel like a distant memory.
Labels:
back in the day,
childhood,
entertainment,
grandparents,
internet,
kids,
mobile phones,
Parents,
radio,
tech,
TV
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