It’s Not Too Late for a Summer Job

If your teen has not gotten a summer job by now it is definitely time. Don't let him or her slack off all summer. You are only teaching him or her that it is aright to be a bit lazy. Also you if you have a kid about to go into college you are wasting valuable time that could be spent earning income.

There are a couple of things that you can do to help your teen find summer work. This is good to keep your teen busy over the summer. They earn cash and learn responsibility. The money they make can go towards saving for college or even to you depending on what your circumstances dictate. Unfortunately poverty is such a problem in the United States that many teens work just to support families instead of saving for college.

Still they are not far away from that time in life when they will have to become full-fledged workers in society. This means developing a work ethic and sense of discipline. The more varied the businesses are that your teen works in the better of he or she will be. Being employed also keeps your teen off of the street and teaches them to be self-sufficient.

You can help your teen find a summer job. Half the time it is just asking the local business or friends who own local businesses if thinned help. You can also put your heads together with your kid's teacher or guidance counselor to figure out what might be a good place for him or her to look for a job. Often the schools know if any local factories or corporations are hiring and what companies are offering special student programs.

I always try to get my teen some kind of outdoor job so that he or she is not cooped up in an office mall or basement of some kind all summer. I try to help him or her find a job I would like and that still offers them chance to get some fresh air. Witnessing on a patio or landscaping is good jobs for that.

Once your teen gets a job they have an opportunity to learn how to take orders, how to rune business and how to deice what field of business they might want to go into after high school. It also gives them a chance to see how easy or hard certain businesses may be.

As a parent I know I want the very best for my teen. That is why I step in to help her find a job. I don't care if others see me as meddling. I only want her to get as much experience as possible and to be as autonomous in life as possible.

Does Your Kid Have Lazy Eye?

Lazy eye is a confusing disorder. This is because the eye does not always look 'lazy.' It is a disorder between the coordination of the brain and eye and it usually starts in childhood. It causes the body to favor one eye over the other.
Lazy eye is a disorder of the coordination between the eye and the brain, usually Amblyopia is the medical name for it. The problem is one eye does all the work while the other gets weaker and weaker.

Poor blurry vision in an eye that otherwise seems normal is the main symptom. It is caused by poor transmission of the visual image to the brain from eye in childhood. It is a temporary condition in most cases — thank goodness!

By the way it is possible to suffer form this in both eyes. That is very rare. The one eyed ambyopia is more common. About five percent of kids (one in twenty) might suffer from it. Many people are not even aware they ever have it. This is because it is normal to have slightly stronger vision in one eye.

Sometimes this eye looks so lazy it can actually stray. Mainly it causes poor depth perception. This is rare. Having a crossed eye or turned eye is a completely different eye condition. It is called strabismus. However lazy eye and crossed eyes and turned eyes seem to be used all the time to describe both ambyopia and everything else.

The way to determine whether or not your child has this condition is to take him or her in for a special test called a visual acuity test. It is not done with the letter chart we usually associate with determining eye problems.

A large number of kids with lazy eye go unnoticed until they have their eyes examined when they get older. Therefore, comprehensive vision evaluations by a trained and qualified vision professional are the best idea even for pre-school kids. You don't want your child going through school with undiagnosed compromised vision! Yet it can so easily happen.

Treatment options for lazy eye include glasses, drops, and certain vision therapies, possibly including the use of a patch. Sure you're kid will look like a pirate but at least he will be able to see the chalkboard. Good thing Pirates of the Caribbean was such a hit and pirates are so cool. However expect little girls to have a harder time with corrective eye patch than boys.

You also need to catch this early. Recent research has shown it can be treated until the kid is seventeen. Improvements are possible at any age but the best chance of correcting completely is catching the lazy eye while your child is still a kid.