Dave's Library

Dave's Library

#parenting
How to Rethink Your Career as an Empty Nester
How to Rethink Your Career as an Empty Nester
When children leave the house for college or other opportunities, the sudden change and loss of predictability can be disruptive for working parents and their careers. It’s common for parents to feel grief when kids leave the house. Perhaps you’ve been caught unaware: you haven’t fully anticipated this time and season, and now your life looks like a blank canvas. How do you fill it? If you’re an empty nester (or will be soon), this article offers some questions for you to reflect on and strategies help you re-shape your life and find meaning — both personally and professionally — during this time.
·hbr.org·
How to Rethink Your Career as an Empty Nester
Use Minecraft to Teach Your Kids Pretty Much Anything
Use Minecraft to Teach Your Kids Pretty Much Anything
There’s a reason the New York Times calls them “The Minecraft Generation.” Today’s kids and teens have been raised on the game, cutting their teeth on survival mode and moving on to creating complex, multiplayer worlds within Minecraft. But Minecraft’s vast community (112 million people log on per month!) are doing more than playing a game. They are occupied in a deeply engaging educational experience that encourages problem solving, creativity, planning and execution—and can even teach older kids coding and electrical engineering.
·offspring.lifehacker.com·
Use Minecraft to Teach Your Kids Pretty Much Anything
Ask Kids "What Did You Fail at Today?"  
Ask Kids "What Did You Fail at Today?"  
At elite colleges, faculty members have been noticing a problem. Many students, while impressive on paper, seem to be unable to cope with simple struggles—getting assigned to a dorm room they’re not thrilled with, scoring less than an A-minus on a midterm, or not making the cut on school teams. The lack of resilience has become so apparent that Smith College now offers an entire course on how to fail. (One uncomfortable class project: having your worst failures projected onto a large screen in the campus hub. Ouch.)
·offspring.lifehacker.com·
Ask Kids "What Did You Fail at Today?"