kids biz - spring break #1
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#12-1225 East Keith Rd., North Vancouverwww.twistconditioning.com | 604-904-6556
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Team Training
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Spring Break CampsMarch 14-18 & March 21-25
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April 4-June 26
Early Bird Registration: Register by March 21 to receive a FREE 1-on-1 session
Capilano University Department of Athletics and Recreation2055 Purcell Way, North Vancouver
www.capilanou.ca/blues
Capilano University presents
BLUES SPORTS
CAMPSSpring Break 2011
March 14-18 and 21-25
BASKETBALL CAMPS
VOLLEYBALL CAMPSGender Age Date Time Cost
Girls Grades 6-7 March 21-25 9:30-12:30 $160
Girls Grades 8-9 March 21-25 1:00-4:00 $160
To Register for Blues Sports Camps or for more info:
Visit: www.capilanou.ca/bluesCall: 604-990-7805
Email: blues@capilanou.ca
Avoid disappointment and register today!UPCOMING PROGRAMS:
Blues Spring Basketball Academy, Blues Club Basketball Teams, Summer Sports Camps
Gender Age Date Time CostCost
Boys Grades 5-7 March 14-18 9:30-12:30 $160$160
Boys Grade 8-10 March 14-18 1:00-4:00 $160$160
Girls Grades 5-7 March 21-25 9:30-12:30 $160$160
Girls Grade 8-10 March 21-25 1:00-4:00 $160$160
A special feature of the
Kids get into the kitchen at local cooking schools
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22
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KIDS
Spring Break Activities and More!BiZ
Classroom games help learning retention
Parents learn what teens are up against at Let’s Talk Shop
A20 - North Shore News - Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Pre-Kindergartenprogram startingSeptember 2011.
OPEN HOUSEFriday, March 4th9:30am to 12noon
To register:
604-908-6626www.beehavenkids.com
St. Clements Anglican Church3400 Institute Road,
Lynn Valley
www.sd45.bc.ca
2011Summer Enrichment PROGRAMS
Where Learning Never Stops
Over 100 enrichment programs for ages 6 – 17. Programs start July 4.
View the program online March 4 www.sd45.bc.ca
Registration starts Wednesday, March 9– be there first!
Spring classes begin April 11, 2011
Classes for Young Artists ages 5-18
Taught by Terrifi c Teachersin a North Shore school near you
Course registration forms available in all school offi ces and online.
www.artists4kids.comFor more information
please call 604-903-3798
Artists for KidsArtists for KidsAfter School ArtAfter School Art
Deana Lancasterdlancaster@nsnews.com
IT’S an intriguing new trend in children’s education, and one has to wonder if the
demand came from kids themselves or from their hungry parents looking for a tasty meal.
Debby Tonn — founder of the about-to-be-launched kids’
cooking school, The Hungry Oven — says children’s cooking classes have been all the rage in the U.S. for a number of years, and had only really started to migrate north to Central Canada more recently.
In our own neck of the woods, “there have been summer programs and classes at community centres,” she says, adding that her own daughter took kid’s cooking during a Capilano University
summer program and loved it, “but there aren’t really any for-profi t cooking schools aimed at younger kids.”
So what’s the impetus for kids’ migration to the kitchen?
A larger trend toward knowing exactly what we’re eating, and eating healthier is part of it, says Tonn. Many parents want to introduce this concept to their children at a
younger age.A recent article in the
Daily Mail said research shows children are starting to cook younger than ever. On average they now cook their fi rst meal at only seven – fi ve years earlier than their parents’ generation did.
“It’s an idea whose time has come,” says Tonn. “There’snothing more thrilling than to have your son or daughter say to you ‘I made dinner tonight.’”
The Hungry Oven is slated to open in the second week of May in a 4,000-square-foot space on Churchill Crescentin North Vancouver. With two commercial kitchens and a “Kinder Kitchen” with induction ranges for children aged three to nine, the school is set to offer a range of courses to all age groups, with executive chef Johannes Oberbichler, formerly a restaurant chefinstructor with Pacifi c Instituteof Culinary Arts.
And while it is primarily for children, The Hungry Oven will also offer some special classes for adults, such as Date Night, Girls’ Night Out and Guys’ Night.
The web site, www.thehungryoven.com, is scheduled to go live later this month. Watch for advertisements in the North Shore News.
Kids get cooking in classes
See Healthy page 21
KIDSBiZ
Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - North Shore News - A21
Spring Break
DAYCAMPSMarch 14 – 25
fun-fi lled 1-day spaces going fast
Active fun foractive kids!
Swimming, arts & crafts, group games, out-trips and more!
Available at the following Community Recreation Centres:
• Delbrook• John Braithwaite
Community Centre• Parkgate*
*Also offering: Before & After Daycamp Care.
Register today!
the place to play
northvanrec.com604 987 PLAY (7529)
Ice Sports - North ShoreIce Sports - North Shore
604-924-0828604-924-0828WWW.ICESPORTS.COMWWW.ICESPORTS.COM
2411 Mount Seymour Pkwy, 2411 Mount Seymour Pkwy, North VanNorth Van
SPRING BREAK HOCKEY CAMPSMARCH 14-18 & MARCH 21-25
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• HOCKEY TIPS FOR TOTS• HOCKEY TIPS FOR TOTS (HALF DAY CAMPS)(HALF DAY CAMPS)
• SKATING, SHOOTING &• SKATING, SHOOTING & SCORING CAMPSSCORING CAMPS (HALF DAY CAMPS)(HALF DAY CAMPS)
PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION,PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION, SKILL DEVELOPMENT AND LOTSSKILL DEVELOPMENT AND LOTS OF FUN – ALL IN A SAFE ANDOF FUN – ALL IN A SAFE AND SECURE ENVIRONMENTSECURE ENVIRONMENT
NEXT SEASON:NEXT SEASON:March 26 - June 26March 26 - June 2610 games and 1 evaluation.10 games and 1 evaluation. All games played on weekends.All games played on weekends.
604.984.9080#2-1485 Welch St.,North Vanwww.edgeclimbing.com
Springbreak Gecko CampSpringbreak Gecko CampMarch 15, 16 and 17 March 15, 16 and 17 ($109.50 + HST)($109.50 + HST) Springbreak Basic Springbreak Basic Spider CampSpider CampMarch 15, 16 and 17 March 15, 16 and 17 ($138.10 + HST)($138.10 + HST) Springbreak Advanced Springbreak Advanced Spider CampSpider CampMarch 15, 16 and 17th March 15, 16 and 17th ($138.10 + HST)($138.10 + HST)
Springbreak CampsSpringbreak Camps
We do birthday parties!We do birthday parties!
Bring in this coupon and Bring in this coupon and
birthday child climbs for free!”birthday child climbs for free!”
Other cooking classes for children around town include Japanese cooking with Kimiko Suzuki, for children Grade 4 - Grade 7; $25 per child. March 15, 10-11:30 a.m.. Suzuki will also offer a Mom
and daughter or Dad and son cooking class (Children’s age Kindergarten to Grade 4; $50 per duo; March 17, 10-11:30 a.m. Classes include hands-on teaching, recipes, all the ingredients and complimentary miso soup! For more information, contact Suzuki at 604-727-5331 or email at kimiko@
kimikoskitchen.com. Find out more at www.kimikoskitchen.com.
The Dizzy Whisk will also be running cooking classes for kids this Spring. Beginning April 7, after-school classes will take place every Thursday in the facilities at Brockton Preparatory School, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Classes will run until June 9 inclusive, cost will be $250 + HST. For more information, call 778-998-3530 or visit www.dizzywhisk.com.
NEWS photo Mike Wakefi eld
KIDS and teens are getting comfortable in the kitchen thanks to the recent trend of junior cooking classes.
Healthy eating spurred trendFrom page 20
KIDSBiZ
A22 - North Shore News - Wednesday, March 2, 2011
“To train and prepare children for their future
roles in life, whatever those may be”
Now enrolling for Spring Semesterand Summer CampsBC’S BIGGEST
MUSICAL THEATRE SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN
www.stagecraft .ca 604-267-SCTS • 604-762-2491
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Complete our winter fun word search for a chance to win 4 Activity Passes to Mount Seymour.
Mail, fax or scan & email your completed entriesto the North Shore News:100-126 East 15th Street, North Vancouver, V7L 2P9or email contest@nsnews.com.
Deadline for entries is 5pm March 9, 2011.Winners will be contacted by phone.
Name __________________________________________
Phone __________________________________________
Learn how to play in a rock band! Write, record, mix and master your own songs in our professional studio, DCM Studios! Create a 3-song demo on CD complete with a cover!
Learn and develop your acting skills for Film & TV through on camera scene work, improvisation and various drama games andexercises! This will not only help your acting skills but increase your self confidence too! Students will prepare an audition for a professional talent agent on the last day!
Learn to sing songs with our in-house professional vocal coach and record your own CD complete with cover in our professional studio, DCM Studios!
Deep Cove Music and DCM Studios
MARCH 14-18TH OR MARCH 21-24TH*Single Days available
604.307.BIKE www.escadventures.com
BIKE + ADVENTUREBIKE + ADVENTURE SPRING BREAK CAMPSSPRING BREAK CAMPS
All programs and levels will have a strong focus on safety. All riders will be required to wear full face helmets and leg & arm armour.
Rental equipment and before & after camp care available.
Break the Shore Adventure Camp
$280M-F * 9am-3pm, 5-13 yr olds. *Groups divided by age.Snowshoeing, ice skating, mountain biking & indoor climbing!
Little RippersM-F * 10am-2pm, 5-7 yr oldsTwo-wheels, brakes, gears and mini-ramps!
$225Extreme Riders
$280M-F * 9am-3pm, 8-15 yr olds. Ride the trails that have made the North Shore the place to ride!
North Vancouver Community Arts Council Presents:
Spring Break Art and Drama CampsFor kids - Ages 6 - 10
For detailed information please visitwww.nvartscouncil.caor call 604.988.6844
808 Lytton Road, NorthVancouverLocatednearRonAndrewsRecCentre6049296060 •FREE PARKING
BALLET • JAZZ • LYRICAL • HIP HOP •TAP • IRISH •MUSICALTHEATRE •MODERN
Aug 15-19 Junior SummerSampler Girls & Boys 6-12yrs10-3pmAn excellent opportunity totry various styles of danceAug 22-26 Senior SummerSchool 9-3pm
For more information or to register visit www.seymourdance.com
SUMMER CAMPSAug 8-12 “Once upona time..”Half Day Campfor Girls and Boys 3-6yrs9-1pmCamp involves crafts andcreative movement basedon various fairytales
Tag!Follow us on
www.twitter.com/northshorenews
■ 101 Classroom Games: Energize Learning in Any Subject, by Gareth Long, Harvey Grout and Stuart Taylor. Published by Human Kinetics, $19.95.
Terry Peterstpeters@nsnews.com
KEEPING young students focused on their work is not an easy task, but one that teachers face every day.
Many have already learned this surefi re trick: playing a game can help students in their retention of learned material, wake them up and refresh them, and it can be a lot of fun to boot.
The authors have presented 101 games that can be used in a variety of ways. The games could be introduced during any part of a classroom session.
The games are presented alphabetically but they can be played in any order.
Beneath each title is information on the games application. This could be to tell the number of players, the type of game or the materials needed, all of which is helpful when choosing a game to play.
For example, Great Balls of Fire! is a game requiring
four buckets, four different colouredballs and a set of
multiple choice questions.
The teams line up and take turns answeringthe questions by running to their bucket and dropping the appropriateball in to signaltheir response to the
question. This game, like
the majority of gameslisted, has a number ofvariations.
Whatever the type and age group you might be working with, there are games provided
here that are sure to makelearning more fun and more stimulating.
Games help to retain learningbooks
KIDSBiZ
Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - North Shore News - A23
Break Spring
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Break Spring
Erin McPheeemcphee@nsnews.com
BY focusing on parent education and youth empowerment, a collaborative community prevention project is effectively forging connections between adults and teens.
Let’s Talk Shop is an ongoing free facilitated evening event made possible by a host of local partners, including Vancouver Coastal Health, Capilano Community Services Society, Ambleside Youth Centre, Parkgate Community Services, North Shore Neighborhood House, the North and West Vancouver school districts, the North Shore Action on Prevention Task Force and the City of North Vancouver.
“Educators can give all kinds of tips and provide the most recent best practice on prevention and the latest research, but really when parents hear teenagers talking about those very issues that they know that their own teenagers are facing, there’s a
certain amount of credibility that that information provides,” says Lawrie Graham, a Vancouver Coastal Health alcohol and drug prevention educator based in North Vancouver.
Since the inaugural session of Let’s Talk Shop in January 2010, fi ve have been held so far with the sixth set for March 9.
Let’s Talk Shop brings small groups of parents of teenagers and teenagers together, giving youth the fl oor.
“It’s really just an opportunity for the young people to answer those diffi cult questions around stress, relationships, drugs and alcohol, peer pressures (and) family pressures and share those insights with the parents,” says Graham. “It’s a very respectful situation where the parents are just listening to the teenagers.”
Facilitators, like Graham and other community youth workers, are on hand to ensure there’s no glamorization of risky behaviour and to offer statistics as needed, for example from the McCreary Centre Society’s B.C. Adolescent Health Survey.
“Parents walk away with a renewed sense of empathy and respect for young people, understanding their challenges and confi dence to be more effective agents of their own life,” says Graham.
Events alternate between being held in North and West Vancouver, seeing parents from North Vancouver meet with teenagers from West Vancouver and vice versa. “That provides a little bit of confi dentiality and anonymity for the students,” says Graham.
The most recent event was held Jan. 25 at the West Vancouver Community Centre.
Jessie Ewing, 18, a student at North Vancouver’s Youth Learning Centre, views Let’s Talk Shop as an effective model for change.
“You’re really open and you’re telling them straight up what you’re feeling and how you think a youth would like a parent to handle things,” she says.
Ewing hopes parents take away the importance of listening to their children.
“It’s a very good learning experience and it can really help your relationship with your child,” she says, adding the same can be said for the
teens who participate.Having parented a number
of teenagers with one left at home, participant Eileen Guss said it was a very powerful evening, and found herself walking away with increased confi dence and awareness.
“It got rid of a lot of assumptions that I had,” she says.
The January session reaffi rmed the importance of healthy communication with teens, spending quality time with them and sitting down and making a concerted effort to listen to how they’re feeling and what they’re thinking, without judgment.
“It’s surprising when you do hear them, that what you thought isn’t true at all, what you’ve been worrying about, what you’ve been catastrophizing, it’s not like that at all,” says Guss. “It gives you real piece of mind,” she adds.
The next event is being held March 9 at Balmoral secondary, seeing North Vancouver parents listen to a panel of West Vancouver teens.
Adults or teenagers interested in attending this or future Let’s Talk Shop events can contact Graham at lawrie.graham@vch.ca.
NEWS photo Cindy Goodman
NORTH Shore teens Mana Kazemi (left), Jessie Ewing and Shayan Behniatehrani participate in the lastsession of Let’s Talk Shop, a prevention project forparents and teens.
Listening without judgment
KIDSBiZ
Teens talk frankly about their issues
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