Helping Kids Achieve Success
GREAT KIDS CORNER
The Place To Recognize & Reward Kids!
 
October 2008

charts

Thank you for your interest in the Great Kids Corner Newsletter. Your name and email address will never be distributed or sold and will only be used to send you our newsletters or other important announcements. You can cancel the newsletter at any time.  To invite your friends to join or to discontinue receiving this newsletter, please see below; the information how to do this can be found in the footer of every issue.

Visit us at
and more.
 
The website series showcasing children's achievements.  
What's New 
Our first press release
about Great Kids Corner and
Kids Love To™
 
Click for our

 
Great Kids Corner sq
 
Visit our Blog for more discussions about kids and our products.
Greetings,
 
Welcome again to our Great Kids Corner eNewsletters. Finding ways to help our kids succeed include guidance and training. When we support our kids in a constructive, positive way, we also gain opportunities to bond with our kids even further.
 
We welcome two wonderful contributors, Shari A. Foose and Laura Sherman to our eNewsletters.
 
Shari A. Foose is the President and Facilitator of the STAR (Sharing Talent and Resources) Parent Network. See below for information about STAR.

Laura (and Dan) Sherman are the founders of Your Chess Coach, based in Florida. Dan and Laura Sherman met through chess in Los Angeles in 1992. Both were strong tournament players in their youth and developed a passion for the game. Now that they are parents they feel it is time to start teaching the next generation.
Visit them at www.YourChessCoach.com.
 
Thank you both for the wonderful support you provide to kids.
 
Sincerely,
Dahlia Benaroya
 
Strategies for Overcoming Stage Fright

By Shari A. Foose,
President and Facilitator, STAR Parent Network    
 
Many people get stage fright, not just children.  It's that anxiety that can either eat you up or you can channel to make you be on top of your game.  Most of us will first see this problem in our children in connection with performing, auditions or public speaking. 

When I was 9, I use to perform on the steel pier.  I traveled all over the place with my magic act and dance studio.  However, I got so nervous before I went on stage or before I went into an audition that I could actually throw up.  Now that I look back on it, I got that same feeling whenever I had to face the unexpected. Some of my approaches to help children overcome stage fright are the following:
 
Get short plays, scenes or monologue books. They should be age appropriate and very easy and enjoyable to read. Invite (non-competitive) friends to take part. 
 
Pull out the material at random when friends are over playing with your child.  You can ask the children if they would like to read scenes with one another.  The parents should NOT stay in the room just let them play.
 
Put together a "PLAY" date.  Have the children make the props, put together the costumes. We have made wigs, Indian vests with beads and many other items from paper bags; let them be creative with supplies that you provide for them. Let them designate who the director and characters will be.
 
Depending on age let your children, use your video camera.  Write different topics you know they will be comfortable with on paper and fold them up (like toys, food, pictures, friends etc.) Tell them they are a famous movie maker and they have to create a movie or commercial on the topic that they pick from the topics you wrote down on paper.  This islet them practice their improvisational skills and learn to organize their thoughts. They can see how they look in front of the camera and you're getting precious memories on film. My daughter and one of her friends found great benefit (and fun) in creating a television show.
 
Create commercials, practice tongue twisters, read a book out loud and have the children act it out or make the sound effects while you read it.  You want them to feel comfortable trying new things and acting crazy even if they don't do it perfectly. 
 
Have a neighborhood talent show.  The children can show their talents from drawing pictures, riding bikes, putting on a puppet show, playing an instrument or anything else their minds and enthusiasm can dream up.   
 
Check out nursery schools, soup kitchens and senior citizen homes in your area.  If your child is an avid reader, they sing, dance, like to do crafts or like to talk to different people, you can see if they can share their talent at one of these locations during a holiday or special event.  One word of caution, PLEASE make sure they are prepared with what they will choose to do.  If it's singing a song they should know the words or maybe they can lead in a sing a long.  You want it to be a good experience for your child and their audience!  
Although these ideas will help them get comfortable doing things in front of other people, in order to fully be comfortable performing, auditioning or public speaking they need to be prepared, well rested and they have to have the desire and passion to do it.  All these ideas work with any age, think outside the box, don't underestimate yourself or your child by having them placed in one mold but create a mold that will fit their talents, hobbies and desires!  
 
� 2008 STAR Parents Network.  All rights reserved
 
Family Bonding Through Chess
by Laura Sherman,
Founder & President, Your Chess Coach
 
Think back to when you first learned to play chess.  Did your mother or father teach you?  Maybe a grandparent?  Over the years I've heard many wonderfully warm stories about people's first introduction to chess.  Those memories are cherished through adulthood, as chess is truly a bonding experience.
 
My father taught me to play when I was 9 years old.  I was fascinated by the boards set up all around the living room, each displaying a different position.  I was so eager to learn.  My father loved something called postal chess, where he would play people from far away exotic lands through the mail.  Most of his opponents lived in Russia, so it took months for each move to arrive.  It was always an exciting day when that postcard arrived with its intriguing stamps.  It held the mysterious code known only to chess players, informing my father of the next move.
 
I quickly fell in love with the game and when I beat my father for the first time I quickly made the decision to try out tournaments.  Although Dad was more interested in postal chess than over the board play, he joined me in my first tournament, so that I wouldn't be alone.  Now the first thing I noticed, in that small Connecticut tournament, was that I was the only girl and the only child.  A little intimidating, but Dad was there, so it was okay.  I soon became engrossed in my games, throwing myself into the battle, eager to conquer my opponent, forgetting that the odds were stacked against me.   I'm not sure who was more surprised and excited, my father or I, when I won second place. 
 
As an adult I spent a year traveling around the country playing in tournaments.  When I attended the NY Open, Dad came up on the train from Connecticut to watch me play.  After each game we would talk about the high and low points, analyzing my play, sometimes disagreeing about my strategies (especially when I chose to sacrifice a piece for a dubious attack). 
 
Of course most people do not get into competition play, but it is still an amazingly bonding experience.  Whether you take a set on family camping trips or out to the beach or just stay home and have family time after dinner there is nothing like chess for bringing a family together. 
 
In this day and age with television and video games, wouldn't it be wonderful to see families playing chess with one another?  And just imagine for a moment what heights our children can reach if they gain the self confidence chess victories bring.
 
For some of you parents out there the first step may be to learn how to play yourself.  It isn't hard to learn the rules and I can teach you some fundamental strategies in an hour or two.  If your child knows how to play, have him or her teach you.  If neither knows, ask Your Chess Coach for help.  That is what we are here for.  
 
� 2008 by Your Chess Coach.  All rights reserved
 
About STAR Parent Network
 

STAR Parent Network, founded and facilitated by Shari A. Foose, is a networking group that provides support for its members of all ages, ethnic groups, and abilities with an interest in the performing arts. Their members perform on Broadway, touring companies, movies, commercials, musical groups, school plays, neighborhood get-togethers and many other venues too numerous to mention. 
 
The Star Parent network has facilitated and enabled many successes for its members, for example, 15 of their members went to California to appear in an episode of the new Nickelodeon iCarly show that premiered September 2007. The network shares audition notices and information, puts together workshops, has shoe exchanges, supports one another and goes after opportunities for education and performing for all ages and abilities. Members are from many states across the US.
 
Shari A. Foose may be contacted via email at sharifoose@rcn.com.

Kids Love To

Special
Free Offer
Now through the end of November, we offer our readers a free webpage on our 
KIDS LOVE TO™ website series to showcase their child's achievements in writing, drawing, crafting, performing, entrepreneurial endeavorsphotography and sports. Give them the confidence and motivation to achieve even more.  Email us if you are interested to discuss further. 
Offer Expires: November 30, 2008