R OM P
Host a Play Street
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SH O P
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Seattle’sChild JA NUA RY/ F E B RUARY 201 9
YOUR GUIDE TO A KID-FRIENDLY CITY
t he
FTY A R C GET e
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meet an inventive shoreline family a teacher who helps kids connect
through art
the mobile school making art accessible to all
R S E AT T L E S C H I L D.C O M
plus libr
em
ask
make you own lur libre mcha ask! Diego Refugio Martinez shows off the lucha libre mask he made during Art-Maranth Mobile School’s visit to Valley View Library
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MONTESSORI SCHOOLS MONTESSORI SCHOOL OF SEATTLE
Enrolling for the 2019 school year!
Nurturing a child’s love of learning since 1979 Educating Children 2.5 - 6
Open House
January 27, 2019 10:00 - 12:00
720 18th Ave. E. 98112 montessorischoolofseattle.com
The Sammamish Montessori School The Sammamish In Redmond
Montessori School The Sammamish In Redmond Montessori School In Redmond
E n r o ll in gg NNo w o w E n ro ll in
CallCall 425-883-3271 tour. E n ro ll in g 425-883-3271for for tour. Naoaw • Child-centered, joyful atmosphere • Child-centered, joyful atmospherewith with Call 425-883-3271 strong academic focusfor a tour. strong academic focus •• Experienced, Montessori-certified teachers Child-centered, joyful atmosphere with • Experienced, Montessori-certified teachers strong academic focus and STEAM • Preschool, kindergarten • Preschool, kindergarten and STEAM • Experienced, Montessori-certified teachers Enrichment Enrichment • Preschool, kindergarten and since STEAM Family owned and operated 1977 owned and operated since 1977 • Family Enrichment • Summer, before & after school programs • Summer, before & after school programs • Family owned and operated since 1977 • Prep Program, (starting ages 2 1/2-3) • Prep Program, (starting ages 2 1/2-3) • Summer, before & after school programs • Prep Program, (starting ages 2 1/2-3)
WOODINVILLE MONTESSORI SCHOOL
in Bothell & Woodinville Accredited Montessori for Toddler through High School Montessori & contemporary methods college prep academics inclusive community
OPEN HOUSES Jan. 10, 6-8 p.m., T-HS Jan. 12, 10-11:30 a.m., pre-K-K REGISTER:
www.woodinvillemontessori.org
Ask about tuition assistance 425-482-3184 Learn.
Grow.
Become.
www.sammamishmontessori.com
www.sammamishmontessori.com 425-883-3271 www.sammamishmontessori.com 425-883-3271 425-883-3271
Woodinville Montessori School
OPEN HOUSE Saturday, October 27th from 10-11 PLEASE RSVP
hello@eastsidemontessorischool.com
p.16
Do you know a girl who LOVES to sing? SEATTLE GIRLS CHOIR
has a non-audition prep choir for girls in K-1 which provides a foundation for choral singing!
Let her voice be heard! rd!
Learn more and register at seattlegirlschoir.org/Piccolini
>>Contents
Let her VOICE be heard!
Seattle’sChild
January/February 2019 // Issue 470
WHAT PARENTS ARE TALKING ABOUT....... 5 DAD NEXT DOOR................ 7 ROMP........................................... 9 CHOMP....................................... 11 SHOP..........................................13 FEATURE MAKE SOMETHING THIS WINTER!........................16 CALENDAR.............................21
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Seattle’sChild January/February 2019 // Issue 470 “Seattle is my town. I know this city inside and out… or so I thought until I had kids.” Seattle’s Child is your guide to getting to know your city all over again. Finding things to do, places to eat, and how to get around — it’s a whole new ballgame with kids in tow. We’re interested in how parents make homes in a space-challenged urban environment, how families create community, and what parents are talking about. Seattle’s Child reflects real Puget Sound families and their broad range of parenting experiences. ANN BERGMAN Publisher, Founder abergman@seattleschild.com BOO DAVIS Art Director bdavis@seattleschild.com SYDNEY PARKER Managing Editor sparker@seattleschild.com JULIE HANSON Website Editor jhanson@seattleschild.com JENNIFER MORTENSEN Calendar Editor calendar@seattleschild.com MIKE MAHONEY Copy Editor JEFF LEE, MD Columnist REBEKAH DENN Contributing Editor CARLA BELL ERIKA ALMANZA BROWN, MEG BUTTERWORTH JIAYING GRYGIEL Contributing Writers AMY CADWELL Publisher’s Assistant ISSY BELZIL Marketing & Sales Coordinator ADVERTISING KIM LOVE Ad Production Manager klove@seattleschild.com MELIA WILKINSON Advertising Sales Manager mwilkinson@seattleschild.com 774-253-2219 STEPHANIE KONAT Sales Account Manager skonat@seattleschild.com 425-770-4768
Dream big. Plan ahead. Washington College Savings Plans can help you start saving towards a brighter future. Learn more at wastate529.wa.gov
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Don’t miss these stories on seattleschild.com
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Winter excursions Take your family skiing or sledding
DNA test pros, cons Things to know if your kids want one
Rainy-day fun Inside places where kids can run wild
»What Parents
„ Find more local news for families on seattleschild.com
Are Talking About Education, health, development and more
The Jackson family out and about in Columbia City.
Making equity our priority Educators must gain knowledge and skills to advocate for black students by C A R L A B E L L / photo by J O S H U A H U S T O N
Kristin and Troy Jackson are proud parents of Collin and Caleb Smith-Jackson, happy 11-year-old twin boys. Both are reserved, the Renton mom explains, until they know you better.
Last year, Collin and another student were engrossed in reading their books — not following the teacher’s instruction to transition to another activity. Collin often reads when he’s supposed to be doing something else, she explains, so there’s no doubt that the incident occurred. But the other student, who was white, was reading too, and when he was caught, he told on Collin. Thinking back, Kristin says it’s almost as though the white child already knew, at just 9 years of age, that he could use privilege to influence
a punitive outcome for Collin. Both boys were questioned by the teacher, but the teacher only believed the white student’s account. Collin was reprimanded, but the other boy was not. “He was really upset,” says Kristin. “He felt the teacher was calling him a liar.” In that moment, for every child who observed that incident, and for Collin, who experienced it, long-held ideas of black inferiority were validated. When this offense CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE >
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Challenging K-12 students in an intellectual community through early entrance, online, and outreach programs Transition School • UW Academy Saturday Enrichment • Summer Programs Online Program • Professional Development
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www.robinsoncenter.uw.edu 206-543-4160 • rcys@uw.edu
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lands on a black child, it brings an awareness at first, and a reminder thereafter, of his difference, how he is set apart, a member of the non-preferred class, and this reinforces, time and again, a sort of societal badge of servitude, which begets resentment and anger. This is not an isolated incident. In 2012, Seattle Public Schools was the subject of a federal investigation into the imbalanced severity and frequency of its discipline of black students. In the Greater Seattle area and nationally, the black male student demographic has consistently ranked as most often removed from the classroom, suspended, and expelled from school. “They would kick me out of class for talking too much, for 30 or 40 minutes at a time,” Logic Amen, assistant principal at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, told City Arts magazine of his time in grade school. Eventually, through this loss of instruction, Amen says, he truly didn’t know what was going on in class. But this is the norm, he says, “in an overtly racist academic institution.” Outcome inequalities from low test scores to truancy to high dropout rates to inability to obtain and retain employment to crime, incarceration, recidivism; and impacts to mental and physical health and wellness, even death, aren’t indicative of the mindsets of black students. These aren’t cultural markers. It’s educators, a mostly white, female populace, who are intimately linked to a wide range of outcomes and factors critical to the lives of black boys. In fact, when black teachers are managing the
classroom, behavior-related removal of black boys is reduced significantly; by 2 to 3 percent, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. So how do we mend this disparity? The answer could be cultural competency development at every level of the academic hierarchy, says Erin Jones, former OSPI Assistant Supervisor turned independent consultant in the field of equitable education. “It’s our primary role as educators to be a mirror to reflect the beauty and talents that reside within each student,” Jones said in a recent lecture at the Teaching Equity South Sound Conference. Her talk closed out what has been, for her, a whirlwind year of equity initiatives. Jones has keynoted, led or participated in more than 20 equity trainings in the Greater Seattle area and beyond in just the past month. Jones says that it’s the duty of school districts, boards and educators to gain equity literacy, and then erect a framework of equitable education. Her conversation is about doing equity, no longer just talking about it. What would it take to deliver a culturally relevant, culturally sensitive quality education? How would the Greater Seattle area look 10 years from now, if today we began to require ethnic studies training, curricula and delivery? Reach out to change-makers like Erin Jones. Learn to recognize subtle biases and inequities. Prioritize the needs, challenges and barriers experienced by black students in every school discussion. Let us all finally begin to uphold and highlight the humanity of black boys, who should have the protection, care, support and right to someday become black men. ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Carla Bell is a Seattle-area writer focused on civil and human rights, social impacts, abolition, culture and arts.
„ Read all of Jeff Lee’s columns on seattleschild.com
»DadNextDoor
Inspiring Inspiring Inspiring Gifted Students Gifted Gifted Students Gifted Students K-8 K-8 K-8
.691. .2625 206206 seattlecountryday.org . 691..2625seattlecountryday.org 206 691 2625 seattlecountryday.org 206 .691.2625 seattlecountryday.org
A little encouragement from across the fence by J E F F L E E , M D
That’s old school If we were to reimagine our school system to prepare students for today’s world of “alternative facts,” fake news and pseudoscience, what would we design? In fifth grade, I was the undisputed spelling champion of Wildwood Elementary School. Each week we memorized a list of words, and on Friday we had a test. That year, I scored 100 percent every time. So naturally, to this day, my spelling is unbelievably… average. Let’s just say that spell-check and I are very close friends. It turns out that my singular talent as a fifth-grader wasn’t my ability to spell — it was my ability to pass a test. And as the years went by, I discovered that this one skill could propel me to success at virtually any school, without being particularly good at anything else. Flash forward a couple of decades, and my own kids had to clamber up that same academic ladder. And how did I judge their progress? I scrutinized their test scores. I obsessed over their grades. I exhorted them to play the game, never once asking who wrote the rules, or why. I just knew I wanted them to win. The school system we all grew up in first emerged in the early 20th century, in response to a particular problem. The Industrial Revolution was transforming our economy from a sleepy agrarian lamb into a voracious manufacturing lion, and to satisfy its enormous appetite, we needed workers — lots of them. But not just any workers. Factories and assembly lines were profitable because they reduced complicated processes into a series of simple tasks.
They required workers to do the same thing in exactly the same way, again and again. This led to a model of schooling that placed one virtue above all others: compliance. Students were seated in neat, parallel rows and taught to sit up straight and fold their hands on their desks. They repeated exactly what the teacher said, and copied exactly what the teacher wrote. They were tested, and their answers were declared right or wrong. If they made the grade, they were passed on to the next level. If they failed, they were reprocessed, or discarded. Schools not only populated our factories, they emulated them. They became an educational assembly line, mass-producing students who were obedient, serviceable and more or less interchangeable. These days, the rows are less straight, and the activities less repetitious, but not much else has changed. If anything, standardized testing is more entrenched than ever. Teachers spend half the year preparing their classes for statewide exams, often knowing that their school’s funding will depend on their students’ scores. Meanwhile, the manufacturing economy that created this system is disappearing, and the few factory jobs that remain are better done by robots than robotic human beings. If we were to reimagine our schools for today’s world — or even better, tomorrow’s — what would we design? How can we prepare our children CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE >
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«DadNextDoor
Photo: Robert Wade
JUL 8 – 26 2019 Olympic Sculpture Park Monday–Friday, 9 am–3 pm After-camp care available until 5:30 pm Make art and new friends at SAM Camp! Learn from local arts educators and get inspired by SAM’s collection. Early registration discounts and need-based scholarships are available.
Week One: July 8–12 Global Voyagers Create a mixed media map, weave a story in cloth, and construct a tale in clay. Week Two: July 15–19 Earth Guardians Explore the natural world, create masterpieces with recycled materials, and paint the landscape en plein air. Week Three: July 22–26 Inventive Builders Create a city of the future, engineer a masterpiece inspired by past artistic inventions, and tell a story using graphics and designs.
visitsam.org/samcamp
for the challenges they will actually face? First of all, we should stop making them memorize facts to spit out on demand. Every one of them will carry a cloud-based supercomputer in their pockets. Their problem won’t be finding facts, it will be differentiating real facts from “alternative facts,” legitimate news from fake news, and science from pseudoscience. We have to develop their critical thinking, so they can navigate the tidal wave of information that threatens to drown them daily. We need to stop teaching to the test. By emphasizing test scores, we stamp out their curiosity and replace it with the fear of failure. In a world where “correct” answers are just a click away, our kids will need to see more deeply into the systems, networks and processes that underlie them. To understand that level of complexity, they’ll need to explore and experiment, and most of all, to fail — repeatedly, creatively and fearlessly. Finally, we need to stop pitting our kids against each other like little academic gladiators, or contestants on Survivor: Ivy League Island. Success in today’s world requires collaboration. A strong team outperforms a collection of individuals every time. I know what you’re thinking: this all sounds great… someday. But what about now? If you don’t have enough money for a fancy private school, or enough time to homeschool, where is this education of the future going to come from? The same place that 90 percent of your kids’ learning comes from already — from you. Their education isn’t constrained by the walls of a school or the hours of a school day. Curiosity and critical thinking aren’t chapters in a textbook. Ultimately, what our children value and pay attention to depends on what we value and pay attention to. If we want them to learn differently, we’ll have to question, and maybe abandon, the things that we ourselves once learned. It’s that simple. It’s that hard. ABOUT OUR COLUMNIST
Jeff Lee continues his inexorable decline from grade-school domination in Seattle.
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5 things to do
„ Find more things to do on seattleschild.com
Right under your nose!
Join the fold at Seattle ReCreative
Winter sports for off-year Olympic fun
January is National Hobby Month and serves as an incentive to take up a new family hobby: origami at Seattle ReCreative. This Family Folding Class teaches basic folding techniques and instructs attendees how to better follow directions and translate symbols found in common origami manuals — just in time for Chinese Lunar New Year on Feb. 5.
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Learn to ski/snowboard This Jan. 12 and 13, Stevens Pass hosts Grom Playground, where instructors provide gear and offer free 30-minute lessons to kids ages 3-7 on snow-covered, friendly hills in Leavenworth. On-site registration opens at 10 am.
Saturday, Jan. 26, 2 to 4 pm at Seattle ReCreative, 8408 Greenwood Ave. N, $30 first child, $25 for siblings. seattlerecreative.org
»Romp Things to do with kids
3 stevenspass.com
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Become a curler What’s so hard (or exciting) about pushing a granite rock on ice? Visit North Seattle’s Granite Curling Club for its open house on Feb. 16 to find out! $25/adult, $10/child 3 curlingseattle.org
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Take to the ice You have your choice of ice-skating rinks in the area, including at Seattle Center Winterfest through Jan. 6. Don’t forget to layer and wear gloves! $8/adult, $2-$6/child 3 seattlecenter.com/ winterfest
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Sled it out This Play Street drew out kids from the Broadview neighborhood.
Host a Play Street! Winter months may not seem ideal for an outdoor party, but it’s just what the neighborhood kids need by E R I K A A L M A N Z A B R O W N / photo by J O S H U A H U S T O N
The Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) issues permits for Play Streets — the legal closure of non-arterial streets to thru traffic to allow people to socialize and
play safely — yearround, but find that they are unpopular during wintertime. So why gear up and play outside in the cold?
Channel your favorite skeleton or bobsled athletes while slip-sliding away at the popular Hyak SnoPark, located off I-90 at Exit 54. Take your own sled/snow tube. For permit requirements:
“Even in winter, kids still want to be outside,” says Dawn Schellenberg, SDOT spokeswoman. “And closing your block provides a safe space right outside the front door.” There are health benefits, too. “No matter what season it is, spending time outside promotes CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE >
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3 parks.state.wa.us
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Go to a hockey game Hockey is alive and well here; the Seattle Thunderbirds are a major junior hockey team that plays its games at Kent’s ShoWare Center. Regular season ends in mid-March. $18+ 3 seattlethunderbirds.com
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active lifestyles, exercise, and better mental health,” says Ying Zhang, family physician with UW Medicine and a Seattle mother. Keeping these benefits in mind, hosting a winter Play Street makes sense, but rallying neighbors to attend may come as a challenge. “Consistency and communication are the key to having a great Play Street,” says Schnellenberg. Try printing invitations decorated by neighborhood children and hand-delivering them together to ensure all neighbors, including those on adjoining streets, get invited to the Play Street. She also suggests applying for a reoccurring Play Street permit to “create visibility and provide over time awareness that something cool is happening.” Another way to entice neighbors to join in: assign a theme like “Glow-in-theDark Play Street” where each attendee receives an inexpensive glow stick during nighttime play. Schellenberg proposes a “Game Day” theme, where neighbors play flag football or street hockey during a Play Street
before the TV watching and feasting begins. Just remember to follow all SDOT safety guidelines for barricading and monitors for proper visibility. Once you have support from your neighbors, there’s plenty of winter fun to be had! Set up an obstacle course incorporating ride-on toys and puddle jumping. Supply children with pails to collect natural objects, or plan scavenger hunts where neighbors hide clues in their respective yards. At the end of the game, the kids will have a communal treasure chest full of outdoor toys. Fill a kiddie pool with rocks and experimental toys or old pots and utensils where children can prepare “meals.” Remember to provide comfort by draping cozy blankets over lawn chairs, keeping guests extra warm and providing a canopy for quick refuge from the elements to keep people coming. With all the memories you’ll create, Play Street will become a year-round tradition in no time.
Plan it!
Visit seattle.gov/transportation to download a permit application, which can be submitted online or in person, and allow at least 14 days to obtain the permit.
e m o c l e w ! n a m l l u to P
Escape from Seattle!
Look! Squirrel! Author Kate DiCamillo’s “Flora & Ulysses” comes to the Olympic Family Theater. This wacky tale follows the unconventional friendship between 10-year-old Flora and a squirrel, Ulysses, who develops human intellectual understanding and superhero strength after she saves his life. Will Flora’s mother accept her daughter’s new fuzzy friend? Visit and find out! Feb. 1-17, various times at the Olympic Family Theater (612 4th Ave. E., Olympia). $15 youth, $20 adults. olyft.org/flora-ulysses
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«Romp
„ More on feeding your family at seattleschild.com
Right under your nose!
Raw cookie dough? Sure! One of the joys of childhood is back. The new Sugar+Spoon food truck sells fun flavors of cookie dough that kids (and you) can eat raw, thanks to heat-treated flour and an egg-free batter. Their schedule is online. Mrs. FrogLegs, which opened earlier this year at University Village, sells edible dough too.
ly onth r m r tte t ou „ Ge p newsleer Chomfood writ n by kah Den / Rebe .com ild leschtters t t a e » s newsle
sugarspoondough.com, froglegskca.com
»Chomp Eating with kids
Lowrider Baking Company’s Full Tilt Sammie
New in town
Blissful bakeries Fine new bakeries and expansions of old favorites are opening all over: Celine Patisserie: Definitely don’t miss the “cruffin.” 3 6801 Greenwood Ave. N., celinepatisserie.com
Damsel and Hopper: It’s mostly to-go, but there’s babka! 34405 Wallingford Ave. N., damselandhopper.com
Deep Sea Sugar & Salt: Tall cakes and possibly the city’s best cupcakes. 3 6601 Carleton Ave. S., deepseasugarandsalt.com Coffee aficionados Drew and Sara Billups have a daughter who’s coffee-curious. Their son? Not so much.
Good Day Donuts: Try the “buttermilk hunk.” 3 9823 15th Ave. SW, gooddaydonuts.com
Coffee-curious kids? When your child asks for a mocha or Frappuccino, at what age is it not unreasonable to say “yes”? by R E B E K A H D E N N / photo by J O S H U A H U S T O N
Breaking up our usual hot chocolate vs. steamed milk debate at the coffee shop counter, my 11-year-old says, “I think I’ll have a mocha today.” “That’s got espresso in it!” I say.
No way, right? But then, why not? Coffee drinks have caffeine, sure, but so does soda, which we don’t wholly forbid. Even hot chocolate contains a little caffeine.
Official recommendations run in line with the old “coffee will stunt your growth” warnings. The American Academy of Pediatrics doesn’t recommend caffeine until children reach adult height. “While there isn’t evidence that caffeine intake affects growth directly, some of the CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE >
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Grand Central Bakery’s bright new Wedgwood branch offers lunch too. 3 7501 35th Ave. NE, grandcentralbakery.com
Lowrider Baking Company: Cookies only, weekends in Georgetown. 3 5805 Airport Way S., lowriderbakingco.com
Macrina Bakery’s new branch at the old Surrogate Hostess spot. 3746 19th Ave. E., macrinabakery.com
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«Chomp CONTINUED
side effects of caffeine intake such as poor sleep can impact growth and development, and caffeine is addictive,” says Dr. Natalie Muth, a pediatrician and AAP spokeswoman. Kids — like adults — might get jittery from too much coffee, or develop a dependence and then withdrawal symptoms, or take in loads of sugar in sweet-bombs like Frappuccinos. Daily double-talls and mainlines of drip coffee are clearly out. As with most parenting issues, though, nuance and personal judgments count for a lot. I ask Sara Billups what she does with her kids. A mom of two, she’s deeply steeped in the drink as Director of Communications for The Beecher’s Foundation and a Seattle writer whose beat includes coffee. Her husband runs the education program and lab at Atlas, a coffee importer.
What if coffeehouses offered kid tastings?
“My daughter asks for coffee on the weekends or on holidays, whenever we’re not rushing to school or work… She’s 6, and since she’s still little, we pour about an ounce of coffee into a tall mug of milk, so it’s more flavor than substance,” Billups tells me in an email. “We want her to
be able to identify the basic taste of coffee and to enjoy the flavor.” Her son, 9, rarely asks for coffee. But both kids have done cupping sessions, slurping and spitting coffee samples and learning about farming regions, fair trade, and different parts of the world where coffee is grown.
“We know caffeine is a stimulant, and that even a little bit affects kids. We know other things kids consume (cough, sugar) affects them, too. But parents can learn the facts and decide when to let their kids enjoy coffee. Coffee culture is fun, cafés with great design and welcoming staff are fun,” Billups said. “I’m dreaming here, but beyond hot chocolate, what if cafés offered kid tastings featuring single origins, with, say, a sip of brewed, single-origin Kenya and a sip of Sumatra. The flight could be served with a map that shows where the countries are located, and a flavor wheel so kids can identify different tastes. That may not happen anytime soon, but if it does, my family will be first in line!” I think mine would be right behind her. „ Got a kids ’n’ food-related question for Chomp writer Rebekah Denn? Email her at askchomp@seattleschild.com
P la y f u l ex h ib its, a r t + science cl asses, summer camps, and mor e !
Located in Downtown Bellevue kidsquestmuseum.org 12
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KidsQuest Children’s Museum
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Q&A
Where do you love to shop in the city? Jose Abaoag, actor and father of Joona, 1½, and Kofi, 5
“I’m a bargain shopper. The Zara kids’ section in Westlake Center is good for deals. In West Seattle, there’s a great consignment store called My Three Little Birds; the stuff that gets filtered through there is usually good. And the toy store off the Junction, Curious Kidstuff, has a friendly staff, with lots of interactive toys.”
Things we love
Marvelous mess catchers Mukilteo mom Erin Davis got her start making bibs for her daughter, Mara, who had acid reflux so bad she’d
»Shop Lively + locally made
have to change outfits five times within an hour. Friends and family admired Mara’s bibs, and so her business, The Bibbers, was born. Her shop’s best-seller is the “bapron” (aka baby apron), perfect for catching mealtime messes with style. 3 etsy.com/shop/ TheBibbers
Shauna Causey at Relovable HQ with son Connery, the inspiration behind her business.
Re-love their closet West Seattle mom launches a new service to help families exchange gently used kids’ clothes by J I A Y I N G G R Y G I E L / photos by J O S H U A H U S T O N
Nobody knows how fast kids grow better than the person doing all that laundry. Babies are the worst offenders, typically tripling in weight in their first year. What’s a parent to do? West
Seattle mom Shauna Causey found herself ordering clothes online (too much packaging) or running around buying off Facebook groups (too much time) for clothes her son sometimes outgrew before he even wore them.
In August, she launched Relovable, a Seattle-area subscription service that delivers gently used clothes to your door, and picks up all the clothes your kids are done with. The service is aimed at parents of babies and toddlers (newborn to 5T), and recently expanded up to size 10. “Relovable is the easiest way to give and receive clothing as CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE >
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Play-time sushi set Pull up a seat and get ready to tuck into the cutest meal you’ve ever seen. Little Yummy Cafe’s menu includes burgers and fries, a strawberry chocolate cake, even a sushi set. Magnolia mom Shalanda Wells makes items to order, and hand-sews her felt food with an eye for detail. 3 etsy.com/shop/ LittleYummyCafe
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your kiddo grows,” Causey says. “Our personal stylists handpick a box of items in your kiddo’s style that we drop off on your porch. While we’re there, we’ll also pick up any clothes and books you’re ready to pass along to another local family. Our vision is to be the most convenient and sustainable place in the world to get quality items to re-love.” The subscription costs $19.99 a box, which includes 8 to 12 items of clothing in your kid’s size and style, and usually a book too. Parents answer questions about style preference and what they need, so what they receive is the right fit. (Causey’s 2½-year-old son, Connery Lormis, for example, is going through a phase where he only wants to wear pajamas.) Relovable’s inventory typically includes a lot of Carter’s, with some Hanna Andersson, Old Navy, Cat & Jack and some
luxury brands (Baby Burberry, anyone?). The clothes are better quality than Goodwill, Causey says, but less than half the cost of Stitch Fix because the service is local and relies on donations. Relovable picks up the kids’ clothes you’re done with from your porch and redistributes them to another family. There’s
The startup operates out of a Seattle warehouse with two full-time employees, and covers all of the Seattle area from Edmonds to Burien. Relovable is looking to expand to Bellevue, and just launched a scholarship program for families in need. “Within a neighborhood, you Stacey Servo, general manager could be helping (left), Causey and Kaia Davis, moms who actually VP of Brand and Operations, prepare a subscription box. just can’t afford it,” Causey says. “That’s a really big part of our focus right now, no required amount — it can be making sure we can give back. more or less than what was in Everyone should have access to the box they dropped off. Bonus: the basics for their kids.” you’re constantly tidying up and q relovable.com purging the clothes your kid has outgrown. About 90 percent of what Relovable picks up is in re-gifting shape, Causey says. Nothing worn out, with holes or stains, gets passed along.
Know of a shop or product with serious kid appeal? „ shop@seattleschild.com
French American School of Puget Sound • 21/2 Years Old Through Grade 8 Bilingual Education • No French Language Experience Required Through Kindergarten • Small Classes and International Student Body • Daily Bus and Hot Lunches • Tuition Assistance • Accredited by the Northwest Association of Independent Schools (NWAIS) and the French Ministry of Education
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Tuesday, January 15, 6–8pm RSVP at attend.fasps.org/january-15-open-house Inquire@FASPS.org 14
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»TheBookCorner
READY FOR ANYTHING IN 2019 The new year brings exciting changes, but also challenges. These titles encourage resilience in the face of difficulty, and teach children how to bounce back with strength and positivity. — Nicholas Carr
Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut
Saving Winslow By Sharon Creech
By Antony John
Darius the Great is Not Okay
Ages 4-8
Louie befriends a sickly newborn donkey, and names him Winslow. Everyone is worried that Winslow won’t survive, including Louie’s new friend Nora, but as their bond grows, a series of life-changing events prove the fragile donkey is stronger than they believed.
Noah has been in a wheelchair for months. Physical therapy isn’t helping. Scared he’ll never be himself again, Noah will have to face his fears with the help of family and friends to move off the sidelines, and move forward.
Darius didn’t fit in at home, and probably won’t in Iran. Explaining his clinical depression to his grandparents doesn’t help either. Then Darius meets Sohrab, the boy next door, and his new friend makes him feel better than just okay.
By Derrick Barnes
Ages 8-12
This multiple-award-winning book is about a boy getting a haircut. A haircut is magic, a transformation. Through the haircut, a boy finds a self-confidence that’s seen by others, and that he can see reflected in them.
Mascot
Ages 8-12
By Adib Khorram Ages 12+
Sponsored by
Ignite your child’s curiosity with hands-on summer camps for youth in grades PreK–8 Registration opens January 15, 2019 pacsci.org/summer-camps
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READY, SET, CREATE! When the sun doesn't shine and it’s too wet to play, and you’re stuck in the house on a cold, wet day, it’s time to get creative with paint, glue and clay! Here’s how three local families and artists make the most of Seattle’s rainy season.
share your story
Shoreline's Kuo family displays the range of their artistic abilities.
Raven Juarez teaches kids how to connect with themselves and others through art
Raven Juarez, at an infant-toddler program in North Seattle, encourages creativity.
by S Y D N E Y P A R K E R
Raven Juarez first developed an interest in art while drawing on a yellow legal pad under her mother’s desk. The child of two busy lawyers, Juarez had to find creative ways to entertain herself while her parents finished up work at the office. “I used to make up stories and characters and draw them doing different things,” says Juarez. “I always felt that I had a closer relationship to myself through drawing than through spoken or written words.” Today, Juarez is a professional artist and shares her love of creating with her early education students at
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„ From picking out paintbrushes to washing out water bowls, what ends up on the paper matters less than the ownership kids take of the process. More tips on how to promote independence and build character through art on seattleschild.com
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an infant-toddler program in North Seattle. Her teaching philosophy is grounded in the Reggio approach; cultivating a space for curiosity and development through play and art-making. “Just like kids babble before they learn to talk, they also scribble before they develop their own pictorial language,” says Juarez. “Art is a language that can be used for something deeper and more important than just something that looks nice on a wall.”
Not only is Juarez a trained visual artist, she also completed a concentration in child psychology while earning a degree in liberal arts from Sarah Lawrence College. She says kids can learn a lot about empathy by sharing stories and feelings through art with their peers. “I think art is a really great way of promoting social justice, and teaching kids to value cultures and communities that are different than the one they grew up in,” says Juarez. A descendant of the Blackfeet CONTINUED ON PAGE 18 >
maketime todream
The crafty Kuo family opens up space for creativity by limiting activities outside of school and work by M E G B U T T E R W O R T H
If you ever have the pleasure of meeting the Kuo family, you will likely be gifted a homemade creation. This musically talented Shoreline family of four comprises Elena, Charles, Sam, 13, and Evelyn, 8. When they’re not filling
their home with sweet melodies, you can find them busy at work on any number of whimsical projects. Elena and Charles grew up in what Americans would call “crafty” families. Their parents, immigrants from India and Taiwan, respectively, would call themselves “makers.” Whether it was tending to a neighbor’s garden “just for the fun of it” or leaving secret handmade gifts on a neighbor’s doorstep, Elena and her parents were always trying to make someone smile. Charles had an artistic bent as
„ Learn how to make dragon egg candle holders and other magical DIY crafts on 13-year-old Sam Kuo's YouTube channel: youtu.be/daia012KbMc
a child and remembers making papier-mâché and charcoal drawings with his mother, who was an art teacher before marrying his father. He also enjoyed creating framed art out of magazine and newspaper clippings. This inherent love of making likely ignited the spark between Elena and Charles when they met
in college. Together, they set up craft stations in their school’s quad during exam time as a stress release for their friends. They both enjoy cooking, and have fond memories of baking an ice-cream cake that turned out lopsided. Since it stuck to the mold, they had to use a blow dryer to melt it slightly before cutting into it. The cake tasted delicious all the same. These days the two are busy parenting, working and volunteering. Elena is a research associate at the Center for Community Health and Evaluation. Charles is a stay-at-home dad and volunteer science and social studies teacher at Cascade K-8 Community School. Surprisingly, finding time for their creativity isn’t a problem. “I don’t think you have to make time for it,” says Elena. “It’s part of daily life.” She and Charles value non-structured time; each member of the family is limited to no more than two activities outside of school and work. “If you have the time to dream and think, good things happen.” Manifestations of their creative tendencies can be seen throughout their house. “We enjoy finding entertainment value and artistic beauty in everyday things,” says Elena. The kids draw faces on all sorts of household items, like kitchen spatulas and toothbrushes. “It makes you laugh every time you use it.” Each member of the Kuo family has a special knack for something. Sam enjoys writing fiction and fantasy. He started Pizza Cat, a YouTube channel with step-by-step instructions for making DIY creations like dragon egg candle holders and edible chocolate bowls. Evelyn is a budding engineer with a keen sense for spatial relations and form. She designs and constructs intricate fairy houses to fit under couches and between furniture legs, using repurposed household materials. Originally, they were intended as homes CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE >
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tribe, Juarez says the cultural teachings of her native relatives inform her day-to-day interactions with her students. For example, she encourages them to think twice before intentionally squashing bugs when they’re playing outside: “I grew up with my grandparents telling me stories and teaching me to respect the earth and all its creatures.” As an urban Native (meaning she was raised in Seattle rather than on a reservation), Juarez says she’s still exploring her connection to her native identity. “I wonder if a hallmark of being Native in today’s society is that you aren’t close enough no matter what you do or where
READY, SET, CREATE!
you’re from,” she says. “With a culture that the government was actively trying to erase for hundreds of years, it’s understandable that the ties aren’t as strong as they could or should be.” Exploring complex feelings in her personal work has inspired her to use art as a tool to guide her students through their own emotional experiences. She witnessed her efforts pay off when a student who became upset after his mother dropped him off at school turned to art to process his feelings. “His mom left and his eyes were all full of tears and he said, ‘I would really like to paint,’” says Juarez. After some time alone with his brushes and paper, the boy produced a painting of his dad in a swimming pool. “I realized that that must
Find Raven Juarez
Beginning this summer, Juarez will offer private art lessons to local kids and adults. To learn more, visit ravenjuarez.com and follow her artwork on Instagram @raven_inthetrees.
have been a memory of a time he felt very safe and secure and really special in his family. He totally calmed himself down and self-regulated by having that opportunity to channel his feelings from a more positive time into this negative moment,” says Juarez. “Then he was ready to begin his day.” To get kids enthused about art, she recommends activities like attaching markers to childsize construction helmets and having the kids use their heads to draw lines on paper taped to the wall. Pouring paint down a ramp, placing a canvas under a swing and letting kids swipe at it on their bellies with a paintbrush, and adding a little clear glue to liquid watercolor are just a few of the fun art adventures Juarez says parents can try to engage kids in art-making. “Art is where kids can turn their memories, their dreams, their ideas and their hopes into a very symbolic, almost poetic composition,” says Juarez. “They know exactly what it means, and if you’re lucky enough for them to want to explain it to you, it can be really moving.”
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for real fairies. Now that she no longer believes in fairies, they’re just fun projects. Charles combines his musical knowledge with his woodworking abilities to make guitars and ukuleles. “I am building a cello as a long-term project, but that is going to take years to complete,” he says. Before her arthritis kicked in, Elena was a talented musician. She plays the violin, marimba and sings. “I think of everything in music,” she says.. “I’ll even assign a pitch to the beeping sound the numbers on a telephone make. It’s how I entertain myself during a conference call.” Recently, the kids crafted a wooden door opener and decorated compression gloves to help Elena with her arthritis. It’s one more way to make her smile. In addition to their entertainment value, Elena and Charles view their projects as a way to model healthy risk-taking: “Our projects are silly but inspiring. The kids see us trying new things, which encourages them to try new things.”
seize every opportunity Art-Maranth Mobile School makes art accessible to Seattle immigrant families by E R I K A A L M A N Z A B R O W N
Local artist Amaranta Ibarra-Sandys stands proudly behind her booth at a pop-up makers market in downtown Seattle. On a white tablecloth sits her original artwork: a Day of the Dead skeleton disc jockey painted on canvas. The heartbeat line behind him warps into Seattle’s skyline, a blend of her Mexican heritage and adopted home. She notices a 3-year-old wearing a handmade paper flower crown and a white traditional Mexican dress embroidered with colorful flowers browsing her table. “Little Frida Kahlo!” the artist exclaims. She shows the girl photos of her live art installation, “Dos Fridas,” in which she dresses like Frida to re-enact the Mexican artist’s 1939 painting, The Two Fridas. The little girl smiles and jumps with excitement; someone shares her admiration for the same painter! Ibarra-Sandys’ passion for exposing children to the arts stems from her own childhood experience growing up in Mexico City. She remembers
Amaranta Ibarra-Sandys demonstrates how to make a lucha libre mask at Valley View Library.
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SUMMER TIME
SUMMER TIME
Join us for an upcoming ProjectFUN Preview Day! ProjectFUN will be hosting Preview Day events on: February 2, March 2, and March 30. This is a great chance for you and your student to learn more about our summer workshop offerings, participate in hands-on activities and demos, and meet our teachers and staff!
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Make a lucha libre mask! The colorful lucha libre mask is worn by professional wrestlers in Mexico City. To make a máscara with your little luchador, all you need is paper, glue, string and scissors.
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Draw design on construction paper and carefully cut out.
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Glue smaller piece of mask to bigger piece.
teaching art, the artist is dedicated to making arts accessible to all, especially to immigrants like herself. In 2013, she launched Art-Maranth Mobile School, offering free classes on creating self-portraits, dry clay, luminaries, calligraphy and more. The classes are available to children and adults at local libraries. Ibarra-Sandys understands that some adults might have reservations about encouraging arts and crafts if they don’t identify as artistic, but says it doesn’t take too much effort to get started: “Have a corner of your house dedicated to be messy.” If room permits, she suggests a well-stocked easel or crafts table for children to explore paints with various-sized paintbrushes, broad and fine-line markers, and paint sticks. While allowing children to experiment with various mediums is important, she also urges parents to join in and get messy while modeling the technique themselves.
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Decorate mask with markers and sequins, and tape string to both sides. Play!
Supplying one’s craft center doesn’t have to be expensive; you can start with materials from your kitchen: “Salvage colorful bottle and foodpouch caps, scrap paper from other projects, and paper towel tubes. Shop local thrift stores for yarn, beads, magazines, and random fabric and dollar stores for seasonal art supplies.” And finally, the art teacher tells everyone she encounters, “Take advantage of the opportunities in front of you.”
Find Art-Maranth Mobile School Visit facebook.com/artmaranth.org for a list of upcoming classes, like its Alebrijes (colorfully painted Mexican imaginary creatures) class on Feb. 28 at White Center Library, or ask your local library to bring Art-Maranth Mobile School’s free workshops to your branch.
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visiting La Casa Azul, “The Blue House,” where Kahlo once lived, on free museum days, but otherwise didn’t have the opportunity to learn about art until adulthood. “When I was in elementary school, I never really had an arts education, nor art supplies, because my mom could never afford them,” she says. Today she appreciates having the resources to share art with her 10-year-old son Lucas at home in Burien. Her first formal introduction to art came in 1995, when she completed a pottery class at Mountlake Terrace Community Center north of Seattle: “I felt my loneliness was melting into pots and mugs in a foreign country where I experienced a language barrier and felt invisible.” Now equipped with a degree in ceramics from Mexico’s National Institute of Fine Arts and almost two decades of experience
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Our picks for January & February
by E R I K A L E E B I G E L O W
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Jan. 11
Jan. 12
Jan. 12
Monster Jam It’s noisy, it’s messy, it’s AWESOME! Come watch monster trucks compete against each other in speed runs and hair-raising stunts at the Tacoma Dome this weekend.
MLK Program with Live Paint! Learn what the big words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. mean through a free afternoon of storytelling, theater arts and creative writing at the Shoreline Library.
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Around the World in 80 Days Redmond’s SecondStory Repertory brings this madcap adventure to stage with a succession of locomotives, steamers and plenty of hilarity. Great for gradeschool-age children.
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Feb. 2
Feb. 23
Peter and the Wolf Tchaikovsky’s classic piece will delight kids age 6 and older; three musicians and a conductor’s assistant try to outwit a fearsome wolf threatening the orchestra and audience. Crafts and instrument exploration one hour before.
Pancake Breakfast & Short Film Smorgasbord Leave on the PJs and come enjoy pancakes and bacon, followed by a short children’s film program at the Northwest Film Forum and Greek Orthodox Church of the Assumption.
»Calendar
„ For our mobile-friendly, totally searchable, frequently updated calendar go to seattleschild.com
What’s happening around town
Jan/ Feb 2019
ll r a fu vents o F „ fe dar o nd Calen anuary a J r o to fo ary g u r b m Fe ild.co
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Tuesday, January 1 New Year’s Day S E AT T L E A R E A
Free State Parks. Start the year off with a free hike through a beautiful state park. FREE. Parks throughout Washington state. www.parks.state.wa.us Resolution Run and Polar Bear Dive. 5K run/walk, kids’ dash (ages 10 and younger, FREE), optional Polar Bear Dive includes a dip in Lake Washington. 9 am registration, 10:30 am run/walk, 11:30 am kids’ dash. $$$. Magnuson Park, Seattle (Sand Point). www.clubnorthwest.org/resolution-run
P H OTO BY O L L I TU M E L I U S
EASTSIDE
Bellevue Downtown Ice Rink. Glide around the region’s largest open-air holiday ice rink. 10 am to 11 pm today; various times through Jan. 13. $$$. Bellevue Downtown Park. www.bellevueicerink.com
Small Frye: Storytelling + Art
SOUTH SOUND
Polar Bear Cub Plunge. Cub Plunge (ages 9 and younger) at 11:30 am; adult and family plunge at noon. Costumes welcome. Life jackets available and lifeguards will be on duty. FREE. Point Defiance Boat Launch, Tacoma. www.metroparkstacoma.org
Wednesday, January 2 S E AT T L E A R E A
Cultures Near and Far. Enjoy family-
oriented performances representing cultures from Ghana, Bolivia and Puerto Rico. 4 to 7 pm. FREE. Seattle Children’s Museum, Seattle (Lower Queen Anne). www.thechildrensmuseum.org
have free admission today. Various times and locations; check websites for details. www.freemuseumday.org
Thursday, January 3
Sing-A-Long Sound of Music. Sing along with the classic film, complete with subtitles and a costume contest. 7 pm tonight and Sat., 1:30 pm Sat. and Sun. $$$. 5th Avenue Theatre, Downtown Seattle. www.5thavenue.org
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Free First Thursdays. Explore a new exhibit or enjoy a favorite gallery. Participating museums around Seattle
EVENT S ARE SUBJE CT TO C H A NG E Please call ahead or check the venue’s website before you go.
Friday, January 4 S E AT T L E A R E A
E VE N T P R I C I N G $: Under $10 / $$: $10–$20 / $$$: $20 and over
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Small Frye: Storytelling + Art. Preschoolers can enjoy dramatic storytelling by Seattle Children’s Theatre in the galleries and an art-making session. 10:30 to 11:45 am on first Fridays. FREE. Frye Art Museum, Seattle (First Hill). www.fryemuseum.org EASTSIDE
Lewis Creek Story Time: Stranger in the Woods. Read along from the animals’ point of view as they gather their courage to find out about a mysterious visitor in their midst. Best for ages 3 to 7 with adult. Pre-register. Two sessions: 11 am to noon or 1:30 to 2:30 pm. FREE. Lewis Creek Visitor Center, Bellevue. www.parks.bellevuewa.gov NORTH SOUND
Matilda. Roald Dahl’s beloved magical misfit proves everyone can change their story. 8 pm tonight; various times through Feb. 3. $$$. Everett Performing Arts Center, Everett. www.villagetheatre.org
Saturday, January 5 S E AT T L E A R E A
Morning Treats and Tweets. Be a birder for a day as you search for birds that make Seward Park their home. Binoculars and donuts provided. Pre-register. Ages 8 and older. 10 am to noon. $. Seward Park Audubon Center, Seattle (Seward Park). www. sewardpark.audubon.org BIG KID PICK
Puss In Boots. The Fremont Players present their unique take on this classic tale in a panto play for all ages. 4 and 7:30 pm today, 1 and 4 pm Sun. $ to $$. Hale’s Palladium, Seattle (Fremont). www.fremontplayers.com
and his five daughters. Featuring performers from Broadway Bound Children’s Theatre. Ages 4 and older. 7 pm tonight; various times through Jan. 27. $$. Rainier Arts Center, Seattle (Columbia City). www.broadwaybound.org SOUTH SOUND
Monster Jam. Watch monster trucks compete against each other in speed runs and stunts. 7 pm tonight and Sat., 1 pm Sat. and Sun., 6:30 pm Sun. $$ to $$$. Tacoma Dome, Tacoma. www.tacomadome.org You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown. A funny Broadway musical based on the classic Peanuts characters. No children younger than 3. 7 pm tonight; various times through Jan. 20. $$ to $$$. ManeStage Theatre Company, Puyallup. www.manestagetheatre.com
Saturday, January 12
Winter in the Park: Kids’ Saturdays. Families can enjoy hands-on art activities and yoga. Bring a cardboard box to decorate a car for a “drive-in” movie. 11 am to 2 pm today and Feb. 9. FREE. Olympic Sculpture Park, Downtown Seattle. www.seattleartmuseum.org
SOUTH SOUND
MLK Program with Live Paint! Learn about the big words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. through storytelling, theater arts and creative writing. 10:30 to 11:15 am. FREE. Shoreline Library, Shoreline. www.kcls.org
Thursday, January 24
EASTSIDE
EASTSIDE
Sunday, January 13
EASTSIDE
Family-Friendly Ranger Hike. Join a park ranger on a guided hike and learn about the birds and animals that call the park home. Pre-register. 2 to 3 pm. FREE. Mercer Slough Environmental Education Center, Bellevue. www.bellevuewa.gov
Wednesday, January 9 EASTSIDE
Student Wednesdays at BAM. Explore the Bellevue Arts Museum after school on the second Wednesday of every month. 11 am to 6 pm. FREE with downloadable coupon. Downtown Bellevue. www.bellevuearts.org BIG KID PICK
Friday, January 11
SOUTH SOUND
Mini Maestros: The Great String Thing-aMachine! Listen to an informal concert designed especially for children ages 2 to 8. Instrument “petting zoo” begins at 1:30 pm. 2:30 to 3:30 pm. $ to $$. University of Puget Sound’s Schneebeck Concert Hall, Tacoma. www.tacomaartslive.org
Monday, January 14
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Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Celebration. Music, dance, poetry, guest speakers and a community service award ceremony. 11 am to 1 pm. FREE. Greater Tacoma Convention Center, Tacoma. www.cityoftacoma.org/mlk
S E AT T L E A R E A
Children’s Film Festival. The largest children’s film festival on the West Coast, with nearly 150 films from countries around the world. 7 pm tonight; various times through Feb. 9. $ to $$. Northwest Film Forum, Seattle (Capitol Hill). www. childrensfilmfestivalseattle.org The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. Explore the magic of life with a toy china rabbit as he experiences love and loss over a 20-year journey. 7 pm tonight, various times through March 10. $$$. Seattle Children’s Theatre, Seattle (Lower Queen Anne). www.sct.org
Saturday, January 26 S E AT T L E A R E A
The Little Engine That Could. StoryBook Theater presents a charming retelling of the familiar tale about a heartbroken engine. 11 am today; various times and locations through Mar.16. $$. Renton Carco Theater, Renton. www.storybooktheater.org Tet Festival: Vietnamese Lunar New Year. Experience the cultural roots and contemporary influences of Vietnam through live performances, hands-on activities and games, martial arts and more. Today and Sun. FREE. Seattle Center Armory, Seattle (Lower Queen Anne). www.tetinseattle.org
S E AT T L E A R E A
Dragon Pearl: Book Discussion and Signing. Hear from critically acclaimed author Yoon Ha Lee about his story Dragon Pearl. 6 pm. University Book Store, Seattle (U-District). www.ubookstore.com
Saturday, January 19 S E AT T L E A R E A
Hawaii Weekend. Dress up in Aloha wear and explore the tropics. Featuring Hawaiian entertainment, hands-on activities and diver shows. 9:30 am to 5 pm through Mon. $$$, free ages 3 and younger. Seattle Aquarium, Downtown Seattle. www.seattleaquarium.org Living Voices: Journey from the Dust. Hear the stories of America’s families confronted by the stock market crash of 1929 and the Dust Bowl through live theatrical performances and archival film. Ages 11 and older. 1 and 2 pm. $$, free ages 14 and younger. MOHAI, Seattle (South Lake Union). www.mohai.org BIG KID PICK
S E AT T L E A R E A
Fiddler on the Roof, Jr. Set in the village of Anatevka, the story centers on a poor dairyman
MLK Youth March. Join a youth-led march to create tangible change in the community. This year’s theme is “Affirmative Action = Justice.” 8:30 am opportunity fair, 9:30 am workshops, 11 am rally, 12:30 pm march. FREE. Garfield High School, Seattle (Central District). www.seattlemlkcoalition.org BIG KID PICK
A Tribute to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Join the community in song, spoken word and dance. 7:30 to 9 pm. $ to $$. Edmonds Center for the Arts, Edmonds. www.edmondscenterforthearts.org
Wetland Waddlers. Preschoolers can explore the Mercer Slough with art, play and story time. Today, get creative with ice. Pre-register. 9:30 to 11:30 am. $$$. Mercer Slough Environmental Education Center, Bellevue. www.pacificsciencecenter.org
Sunday, January 6
S E AT T L E A R E A
Kindiependent Concert Series: Recess Monkey. Jump around to great music and fun on Saturday mornings through Feb. Buy tickets in advance to guarantee entry. 10:30 am. $$. Mount Baker Community Club, Seattle. www.mountbaker.org
Shi Shi Mai Blessing. See a traditional Japanese shi shi mai (lion dance) blessing to drive away evil spirits and bring good luck. FREE, admission required to see exhibits. 1 pm. Wing Luke Museum, Seattle (International District). www.wingluke.org
Mochi Tsuki Festival. Try the traditional art of making mochi by pounding sticky rice into a sweet treat. Watch Seattle Kokon Taiko drumming (noon and 2 pm) and learn about JapaneseAmerican culture. 11 am to 3 pm. FREE. Woodward Middle School, Bainbridge Island. www.bijacevents.org
Monday, January 21
NORTH SOUND
Around the World in 80 Days. A madcap adventure on a succession of locomotives, steamers and hilarity. 1 and 3 pm, weekends through Jan 27. Recommended for grade-school-aged children. All-ages shows held on Sun. $ to $$. SecondStory Repertory, Redmond. www.secondstoryrep.org
FA R T H E R A F I E L D
Great Train Show. See hundreds of trains, accessories, scale models and collectible toys, plus kids’ activities and special exhibits. 10 am to 4 pm. $$, free ages 11 and younger. Western Washington Fairgrounds, Puyallup. www.trainshow.com
S E AT T L E A R E A
Medieval Music Family Concert. Discover instruments and songs of long ago in this familyfriendly concert. Children can try out instruments after the show. 1:30 to 2:30 pm. $. University Heights Center, Seattle (U-District). www.historicalarts.org
Ranger-Led Hike. Explore the natural and cultural history of Lewis Creek Park while looking for signs of local wildlife.10:30 am. FREE. Lewis Creek Park, Bellevue. www.parks.bellevuewa.gov
live music from choirs. 10 am to noon. FREE. McGavick Conference Center, Lakewood. www.cityoflakewood.us
NORTH SOUND
Ursulmas Medieval Faire. Combat tournaments, kids’ activities, demonstrations and a village marketplace. Minors must have a form signed by a parent or guardian for some activities (download online). 9 am to 6 pm today, 9 am to 5 pm Sun. $$ to $$$, free ages 17 and younger. Evergreen State Fairgrounds, Monroe. www.ursulmas.org BIG KID PICK
SOUTH SOUND
AveKids: The Magic of Louie Foxx. This oneman show mixes comedy and magic. 2 pm. $$. Auburn Avenue Theater, Auburn. www.auburnwa.gov Sesame Street Live! Let’s Party! Learn new songs and sing along to familiar favorites with Oscar, Cookie Monster and more. 2 and 6 pm. $$$. Accesso Showare Center, Kent. www.accessoshowarecenter.com
Sunday, January 27
SOUTH SOUND
S E AT T L E A R E A
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration. Hear
Celebrate Asia. This concert features Korean
music and other festivities that celebrate the rich musical traditions of Seattle’s Asian communities. 4 to 5:30 pm. $$$. Benaroya Hall, Downtown Seattle. www.seattlesymphony.org
Friday, February 1 S E AT T L E A R E A
The Sleeping Beauty. Watch the beloved fairytale come to life on stage as a ballet. 7:30 pm tonight; various times through Feb. 10. $$$. McCaw Hall, Seattle (Lower Queen Anne). www.pnb.org NORTH SOUND
Arlington-Stillaguamish Eagle Festival. Guided eagle tours, demonstrations, an animal show, music, wagon rides, hands-on arts and crafts and more. FREE, fee for some activities. Today and Sat. Various locations in and around Arlington; see website for schedule. www.arlingtonwa.gov/eaglefest SOUTH SOUND
Flora and Ulysses. A squirrel is rescued from a vacuum cleaner by 10-year-old Flora. She names him Ulysses and discovers he has been reborn a superhero. Recommended for ages 6 and older. 7 pm tonight; various times through Feb. 17. $$. Olympia Family Theater, Olympia. www.oft.olyft.org
Saturday, February 2
The Mouse Woman. Theater For Young Children presents The Mouse Woman and How the Raven Stole the Light, two tales from native Northwest peoples. 10:30 am. FREE. Green Lake Community Center, Seattle. www.seattle.gov/parks
Saturday, February 9 S E AT T L E A R E A
Hands-On Skills Fair. Learn skills such as food preservation, seed saving, soap making, basic plumbing and electrical, carpentry, gardening, bike maintenance and more. 10 am to 5 pm. FREE. Meadowbrook Community Center, North Seattle. www.seattle.gov/parks BIG KID PICK
Valentine’s Arts and Crafts. Create some sweet treats and a card to tell your loved ones how much you appreciate them this Valentine’s Day. For ages 12 and younger. 3 to 4:30 pm. FREE. International District/Chinatown Community Center, Seattle. www.seattle.gov/parks Valentine’s Day Celebration. Watch as zoo animals receive heart-shaped steaks and other favorite treats. 10 am to 3 pm. $ to $$, free ages 2 and younger. Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle (Phinney Ridge). www.zoo.org
Step Forward: SR 99 Grand Opening. Say “goodbye” to the viaduct and “hello” to the future of SR 99. Families can experience the new tunnel with STEM activities located at several hub locations. Viaduct tours and an 8K fun run on Sat., bike ride on Sun. 8K starts at 7:30 am; check website for full schedule. FREE, tickets required for some activities. SR 99, various locations from SoDo to Seattle Center, Seattle. www.99stepforward.com NORTH SOUND
Kidstock! This family arts celebration features music, theatre and activities for kids. 9:30 am to 3:30 pm. FREE. Edmonds Center for the Arts, Edmonds. www.edmondscenterforthearts.org
Thursday, February 7
scout merit badges and a film festival. 9 am to 5:30 pm today, 9 am to 4:30 pm Sun. $$$. Lynnwood Convention Center, Lynnwood. www.flyfishingshow.com
Golden Dragon Acrobats. A show of skill and beauty combines acrobatics, traditional Chinese dance and theatrical costumes and performances. 7:30 pm. $$$. Auburn Performing Arts Center, Auburn. www.auburnwa.gov
SOUTH SOUND
Love at the Zoo. Watch animals eat Valentine-themed treats. 10 am to 4 pm through Sun. $ to $$, free ages 2 and younger. Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium, Tacoma. www.pdza.org
Saturday, February 16 EASTSIDE
Sparkle Fairy’s School for Formerly Vile Villains. Sparkle Fairy gives villains a chance to mend their ways. This year’s graduating class includes Captain Hook, Cinderella’s stepsisters, The Big Bad Wolf and Snow White’s Queen. Recommended for gradeschool-aged children. All-ages family shows on Sun. 1 and 3 pm weekends through March 9. $ to $$. SecondStory Repertory, Redmond. www.secondstoryrep.org NORTH SOUND
S E AT T L E A R E A
Pancake Breakfast and Short Film Smorgasbord. Enjoy breakfast with a short children’s films. Part of Children’s Film Festival. 9:30 am breakfast at the church, film at 10:30 or 11 am at Northwest Film Forum. $$. Greek Orthodox Church of the Assumption, Seattle (Capitol Hill) and Northwest Film Forum (Capitol Hill). www. childrensfilmfestivalseattle.org
entertainment and more from a variety of Asian and Pacific Island countries. This year’s featured country is Hawaii. 11 am to 6 pm. FREE. Tacoma Dome Exhibition Hall, Tacoma. www.tacomadome.org
SOUTH SOUND
Asia Pacific New Year Celebration. Food, crafts, live
The Fly Fishing Show. Two days of fly fishing fun, including casting demos, a learning center for kids,
Kids ’n’ Critters. Crafts, activities and trailside encounters with some of the park’s smaller animals, plus half-hour tram tours. 9:30 am to 3 pm through Mon. $$, up to four kids ages 12 and younger will be admitted FREE with each paid adult. Northwest Trek Wildlife Park, Eatonville. www.northwesttrek.org
Thursday, February 21 EASTSIDE
Wintergrass. Bluegrass music festival includes concerts, dances, music jams and kids’ workshops. Various hours through Sun. (see schedule online). $$ to $$$, free ages 11 and younger. Hyatt Regency, Bellevue. www.wintergrass.com
Saturday, February 23 S E AT T L E A R E A
Peter and the Wolf. Without upsetting the maestro, three musicians and a conductor’s assistant must outwit a fearsome wolf. Recommended for ages 6 to 12. Doors open one hour early for crafts and instrument exploration. 11 am. $$. Benaroya Hall, Downtown Seattle. www.seattlesymphony.org
ASSUMPTION-ST. BRIDGET SCHOOL
Academics Faith Community CYO Sports Exceptional Teachers Arts Education
OPEN HOUSE JANUARY 31
Now enrolling PreK-8, with Middle School availability RSVP to admissions@asbschool.org
S E AT T L E A R E A
CulturalFest International Expo. Arts and crafts, games and hands-on activities with international students and volunteers representing a variety of cultures. 10:30 am to 3 pm. FREE. Husky Union Building at University of Washington, Seattle (U District). www.fiuts.org
Friday, February 8 S E AT T L E A R E A
Ferdinand and the Bull. Stop and smell the flowers with Ferdinand the Bull and his friends — the brass section! The trumpet, trombone and tuba will teach how music, like Ferdinand, can be fast, slow, loud or soft. Part of the Tiny Tots concert series for ages 5 and younger. 10:30 am today and Sat., 9:30 am and 11:30 am Sat. $$. Benaroya Hall, Downtown Seattle. www.seattlesymphony.org
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