Ann and Jack are a mother and son team on a mission
They want to fill the World with kid Entrepreneurs
Empowering your Kids
Over the years and while I was writing this book I have run into some wonderful resources I wanted to share.
I hope this page is helpful to you and you find some ideas and resources to help you empower your kids!
The subject matter is very diverse, so no doubt you’ll find something of interest.
|
Brain Power is Fun Brain Power is Fun is packed with 120 fun and challenging activities which train the children’s ability to think and find the solutions themselves independently and when they are lost in the process, parents will be guided on how to teach effectively by asking appropriate questions using a very simple and eective technique to lead their children to the solutions. These activities range from puzzles, riddles to number and code-cracking games specially designed to develop the children’s ability and growth of skills to think and develop their natural creativity and curiosity |
|
English Power is Fun English Power is Fun has 127 activities using poetry, nursery rhymes and story telling to cultivate the children’s love for the language. Nursery rhymes are fun and enrich a child’s vocabulary through their short, simple texts. Rhymes stay with us throughout our lives as they are passed from one generation to another. Nursery rhymes have a musical quality incorporating language rhythm, patterns and rhymes in every verse which fascinates children to develop their language. Story telling is a creative way to train a child to use their imagination and |
|
Math Power is Fun
Math Power is Fun has 121 activities to build the essential knowledge of basic mathematical concepts like :
|


Four sons. Three with ADHD. One with a Learning Disability. Lots and lots of homework. How our family discovered
100 WAYS TO HELP YOUR CHILD
|
![]() |
She stares into space, ignoring her homework. He’s oblivious to the math you’re trying to teach. The kids are unfocused, distracted, zoned out. They just don’t pay attention. You know. You’ve been there.
Our family has, too. A typical homework session at our house used to go something like this:
|
It has taken 20 minutes to get our son Ron ready to do his math homework. We’ve dealt with a lost assignment, a broken pencil, He looks at the page. “There are twenty problems! I’ll never get these done!” To his credit, he starts, but when I check ve minutes later, he’s only done problem one…and he’s watching the dog scratch “Pay attention!” So he does problem two, gets distracted when the phone rings, and doesn’t notice he’s skipped to problem four. “I can’t do this!” he wails. “I don’t remember how.” He does know how, but he can’t focus. |
“Think!”
He’s only on problem five and my patience is wearing thin. And we still have a book report to do… You know the rest of the story, because yesterday, it happened to you. Whether you’re a parent or a teacher, you know the frustration, the aggravation and the stress – of having kids who just don’t pay attention.
By the time our third son started school, I’d had enough. There simply had to be some way to get hold of the boys and help them focus. And that’s when I started my list…
When I nished, I had 100 ways to help my kids pay attention – hints from our family, teachers, and friends. Practical stuff. Stuff that worked. I’ve listed all 100 ways in a 35 page, downloadable report called Focus Pocus – 100 Ways to Help Your Child Pay Attention.
The 100 tips in Focus Pocus will help you as parents and teachers, but most of all, they’ll help your
kids learn to “Listen!” “Pay attention.” “Stop daydreaming.” And “Focus!”
Focus Pocus includes hints on how to pay attention in the classroom. It lists ways kids can focus on
homework. There are strategies, techniques and little tricks that will help your child pay
attention – whether or not they are on medication, whether or not they are labeled ADHD.
HINTS LIKE THESE:
- To make vocabulary words easier to learn, divide them up into small groups, and study each in a different room.
- To give a multi-sensory whammy to math, have your child talk through math problems out loud.
- To help students copy homework assignments correctly, write them on the board in different alternating colors.
- To keep kids from zoning out through verbal reminders to pay attention, ash the lights or ring a bell.
- To help your child sit still through a “boring class”, teach them appropriate ways to fidget


