I've only seen the game for this show on Disney's website. Every time Kim is foiled, the baddies make some punny comment about her appearance. Seeing as it's a Disney product, that ...
saacnmama’s profile

- Texas
- 1 kid: age 7
What My Kids Love Now
House Rules
When the Kids Are Asleep…
My Biggest Challenge Is:
Titles You’ve Reviewed

TV: Kim Possible
I rate this titleiffyand give itMy concerns are:- Negative role models

TV: Imagination Movers
I rate this titleonand give itwhy all guys?
I weened my son off the Wiggles before he really got into them, because it seemed the only women were doing silly dances during the songs, but none of them had developed characters. The singer for ...

Web site: Webkinz
I rate this titleonand give itugg.
Webkins is all about scoring points. They can be used to 'buy' things for your animal, or you can just rake 'em in for bragging rights. (My son is sitting on over 8000). The point is 'more is more'. ...

Web site: Webkinz
I rate this titleonand give itugg.
Webkins is all about scoring points. They can be used to 'buy' things for your animal, or you can just rake 'em in for bragging rights. (My son is sitting on over 8000). The point is 'more is more'. ...

Web site: Disney
I rate this titleiffyand give it
Web site: EekoWorld
I rate this titleonand give itgreat for precient 5-yr-old
It's hard to find appropriate reading material or websites for my son. He's 5 and can easily read chapter books like the Littles, but most of them feature main characters who are several grades above ...
Comments You’ve Made
- Article:
Has Technology Changed Kids' Sense of Right and Wrong?
Your Comments:As a university prof (1st year students are barely 18 and very fresh!) I don't think the line is always so clear to kids. Sometimes it's obvious: The time I caught a student clicking through her cell phone on a multi choice test (I'd left the questions in the same order but she didn't seem to realize I'd mixed up the answers) the others all knew she shouldn't've been doing it, just as they agreed when I insisted a student ended a call she took DURING class. (She claimed it was her mother. I said her mother would want her to do well in class.) But when to use quote marks, when to cite sources, how to work together on an assignment and not give identical answers--it all seems obvious to me, but is something I explain over and over. They could be tricking me, but I think this is lacking in their preparation.
- Article:
How do you manage your kids' pop culture obsession?
Your Comments:That's what you call an obsession? When my son scatters references to Peep and the Big Wide World, Pippi Longstocking, Charlotte's Web and others through everyday conversation, I call it a literary reference and am glad he can make such connections. Granted, the times he simply repeats large blocks of script over and over can get on my nerves, but he and I both will reference characters and events from favorite books and videos either to make a point or when we're being funny. Of course, I'm not sure how fully he, at 6, understands that they are fantasy, but he'll get there, I'm sure. I've noticed that, although he'll be very taken by a new book for a while, the other references are still there and return more fully once the recent fascination wanes a bit. I can occasionally get him to imagine characters from several stories meeting.
- Article:
Full-Frontal Awkwardness
Your Comments:I'm so glad I'm raising my son to be comfortable with human bodies! True, at 6 we haven't talked about what an erection can do (the OP didn't mention it, but I assume the penis close-up was of an erection), but I know we'd be able to handle a picture of a naked grown-up, male or female.
