Ok. it’s 2019. I get (well not really) that people feel like their fetus needs to have its own Snapchat. But can we please take a minute to talk about this. I have a 13 year old, and I think he is literally the only kid in his 7th grade class who does not have a Social Media account. I’m not joking. Has he asked for one (or two)? Yep. But we’re still holding out. And here’s why.

1. It’s A Big Time-Suck
I‘m not going to even tell you how many hours I spend a day on Instagram. Although it’s probably just as long as you do. We’ve all been there. We have a few minutes so we open the app, just to get caught up on all of the important things Kendall Jenner is up to. Next thing we know, an hour has gone by, the laundry is still sitting in the dryer waiting to be folded, and your dog is staring at you in a judgemental way.

Now imagine how hard it would be to manage that as a 13 year old. My kid can barely manage his time as it is. His room is a mess, he forgets about important homework assignments, he has school projects to work on, guitar to practice, and swim team to get to. I can’t imagine how much harder it would be for him if he had the lure of Snapchat right at his fingertips.

Besides, he’s already on his phone too much- texting, watching YouTube or streaming “The Office.” Common Sense Media reports that teenagers spend an average of 9 hours a day on their phones, and prefer texting to talking in-person. Think about that.

2. What My Kid Doesn’t Know Won’t Hurt Him
My son is a super happy person. He’s involved in tons of school activities, plays the guitar and swims on a competitive swim team. He has a great group of friends with whom he texts (constantly) and hangs out with on the weekend.

But guess what? There are a lot of parties he hasn’t been invited to. Plans have been made without him. People who are hanging out on Saturday nights who decided to to include him.

Does he know about these things? Maybe, maybe not.

But, if he had Instagram or Snapchat he would see the parties, hangouts, and walks into town happening right as they were occuring. I’m not saying he should live in a bubble and think he’s included all the time- but seriously, has any 13 year old ever felt that way, ever? We live in a weird culture where there’s now a hashtag to encompass the feeling of missing out on things, and I don’t want my kid feeling that anymore than he needs to.

3. It Makes It Harder To Connect 
Remember when you were in 7th grade? If you wanted to talk to your friend on the phone, you called her house and most likely an adult answered the phone, which required you to have a conversation. Today, my son rarely has to talk to his friends’ parents because they make plans via text.

It used to be that if you wanted to watch TV, you had to do it in the family room with everyone else, and guess what? You had to compromise with your siblings when deciding what to watch. But now, my kid streams Netflix on his phone while his younger siblings watch something different on TV.

It takes real effort for families to stay connected. I go through my son’s texts and I’m constantly reminding him that only watching “The Office” with his headphones on is unnecessary since we can watch it as a family.

Retreating to Instagram or SnapChat would make it even more challenging for us to stay connected.

One of the ways our family likes to reset and connect is by going on long weekend trips throughout the school year. I can only imagine how different our time in Disney or our recent trip to Memphis would have been if he had felt the need to constantly post about what we were doing, or check in on what was going on on Social Media.

Speaking of disconnected, during our Southwest roadtrip last Summer, we saw a number of teens consumed by their phones in majestic locations like the Grand Canyon, Monument Valley, and even while hiking the Narrows in Zion National Park!

4. Serious Mental Health Risks
It’s no secret that suicide rates are on the rise. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, Suicide is the second leading cause of death, after accidental injury, among people ages 10-34. Between 2001-2017, incidents of Suicide increased by 31%  Of course, not every kid who is on Social Media is going to have suicidal thoughts. But there is clear evidence that Social Media does have an adverse effect on our mental well being.

In March of 2019, NBC News reported on a study conducted by The American Psychological Association on mental health and Social Media. The study said that kids born in 1995 and later show increased signs of mental health issues. Most notably, the greatest spike in symptoms were seen in 2011, not coincidentally the same year that Instagram and Snapchat were founded.

It’s ironic that a platform based on connecting people socially is actually associated with feelings of social isolation and social anxiety.  Think back on your time in Middle School. Everyone, at one point or another, felt lonely or anxious about a social situation. Now imagine adding Social Media to your adolescence. Can you imagine how that might have exacerbated your perceptions?

Bottom Line…

So, while I’ve given in and gotten my kid a phone—and trust me, he was one of the last to have one of those, too—when it comes to Social Media, I’m standing my ground. But here’s the interesting thing. After asking and asking for an Instagram (he knows SnapChat is not an option), one day he just stopped. Maybe it was because we explained that we didn’t want his self-worth to be dictated by how many likes he has. Or maybe it was because he was tired of hearing us say no, and he didn’t want to even bother anymore.

It will always be something. When I was in 7th grade I begged my parents for a TV in my room, and I didn’t understand why we couldn’t have a separate “Kids Line” like my friend Kelly did. My parents had their reasons, and that was that- no matter how unfair I thought they were.

Part of being a teenager is wanting what you can’t have and thinking your parents are unfair. Hell, if your kid doesn’t feel that way, then you’re probably doing something wrong!

But, our job as parents isn’t to give them what they want; our job is to help them navigate childhood (especially adolescence) in the best way possible.

Having a teenager in 2019 means you’re going to constantly be trying to balance when they should and shouldn’t be on their phone. However, it’s our job to make sure we’re providing them with the alternatives they need. Put the phone away and: go out to dinner, go to the movies together, watch a game on TV as a family, or take the dog for a family walk.

We only have them around for so long. Let’s make that time count. 

I'm Missy, a mother of three and a middle school drama teacher at a private school. I'm obsessed with my Vizsla (dog), traveling, and the musical Hamilton. I also enjoy writing and sharing fun parenting stories, which is what brought me here.

Photo: My own photo

How are you feeling, they ask. 

Many well-meaning, caring and generous friends are probing, texting, inviting me for coffee. Some have been through it, others are still breastfeeding. How am I feeling about sending my oldest child away to college this fall? 

So, how am I feeling? 

Well, I am often near tears. I vacillate between feeling sad and slightly manic. I am blasé about it all. “I’m fine, no big deal. I’m so excited for her!” I say with a brave smile. I am frequently exasperated and critical of her excessive shopping and emotionality. I am also truly, genuinely happy for her to begin this next chapter. In short, I’m a bit of a mess. And that’s OK. 

If your child is leaving or has left for college, whether it is your first, only or youngest offspring, you have shared these feelings and more. If you think it was no big deal and you couldn’t wait to see them go, I applaud you. I’d like to sit with you a while so I can absorb some of your stoicism. I might also scratch the surface a bit, to see what lurks below. I want to believe that everyone is struggling with the same stew of emotions that I’m feeling.

Walking down the street these recent days, I’ll suddenly have a flashback of a moment, long past. Age 2, her messy face as she shoveled spaghetti and red sauce into her mouth at a nursery school “try-out.” She held the plate up and asked for more, please. How the school director, an Orthodox Jewish woman, astonishingly the mother of 9 children herself, called her “delicious.”  I’d never heard that word applied to a child. And indeed she was delicious. Chubby, round, happy. Precocious, sassy, bright. Sensitive and sometimes maddening, insisting we rock her, lie with her, do her bidding. We were amateurs, jumping at the first whimper, constantly at her beck and call. She had our number from the start. She made us a family, taught us how to be parents, welcomed her siblings and charted a course for all of us over the last 18 years.  

We’ll surely feel the loss in our home, in our kitchen, at our dining table, but I fear I’ll experience it a little more deeply than the others. She is my shopping buddy, my confidante, my fashion police and my pop culture guru. We share a love of musical theater and enjoy many of the same singers and bands. I recently impulsively bought two tickets to a concert in October, jumping to grab them before they sold out. As I pressed the “buy now” button on the website, it didn’t occur to me for a moment that my daughter wouldn’t be here to join me. Of course, I’ll find a companion—my husband or a friend—but it won’t be the same. She plays many roles in my life, but at the end of the day, I’m proud and gratified to call her my friend, and I’ll miss her presence in my daily life. 

I feel a constant low-grade worry about her safety at college, her health (physical, mental and emotional), her ability to handle the academic and social pressures. I hope we’ve done a good job of preparing her for the realities of the world, given her the tools to care for herself, to stand up when she falls down, to walk away from toxic people. I want to send her away for four short years, safe in the knowledge that she’ll return to us a stronger, more confident, even smarter version of the young woman she is today. But mostly, I just want her to come back, soon.

Another flash of memory: we are walking down the street after elementary school dismissal. Was it Kindergarten? First grade? It is late Fall and the light is already starting to change, the day becoming short. The afternoon sun is golden, dappled on the sidewalk through the bare branches of the trees that line the block. She is running away from me, laughing, her brown hair flying behind her. She tosses a smile over her shoulder at me, daring me to chase her. 

We walked that block literally hundreds of times when she was young. Why does this moment stick, and I have forgotten all of the others? What is that memory trying to tell me? 

She’s running ahead of me. She is happy. She is healthy and strong. She embraces life. She’s on her way.

 

Natalie Silverstein
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Natalie Silverstein, MPH, is the NYC coordinator of Doing Good Together. She is a writer, speaker and consultant on the topic of family service. Her first book Simple Acts: The Busy Family's Guide to Giving Back was published in 2019 and her second book for teens will be published in 2022.

’80s kids can tell you how valuable their Garbage Pail Kids trading card collection was. Now fans can expect things to get even slimier. Goosebumps creator, R.L. Stine has teamed up with The Garbage Pail Kids to create the first-ever GPK illustrated middle-grade series. 

Garbage Pail Kids: Welcome to Smellville

The Garbage Pail Kids live in the town of Smellville in a big tumbledown house. People may think they are gross, but they are just Garbage Pail Kids living their best lives. This hilarious new series features all of your favorite kids, from Adam Bomb to Brainy Janie to Junkfood John to Nervous Rex. These middle schoolers get into mischief all while battling bullies and their archenemies, Penny and Parker Perfect. As an added bonus, the book comes with four exclusive GPK stickers.

Garbage Pail Kids R.L. Stein

“The Garbage Pail Kids are ghastly, loud, messy, out of control . . . out of their minds. In other words, MY kind of kids!” says Stine. “I’m hoping to create a book series that captures all the loopy slapstick fun of these uniquely awful characters, to get all middle-grade kids reading—and laughing.” 

Garbage Pail Kids: Welcome to Smellville is available now on Amazon for $10.48.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Abrams Books

 

RELATED STORIES

My Name Is Inigo Montoya; Prepare to Buy This Book!

Little Feminist Releases 3 New Inclusive Board Books for Toddlers

Jonathan Van Ness Wrote a Children’s Book about a Nonbinary Guinea Pig & Your Kiddo Needs This

 

Photo: Tinkergarten

When I became principal of a second and third-grade elementary school, each grade had just 22 minutes—start to finish—for lunch. What was the result? Rushed eating. Food waste. Frequent friction between kids and lunch aides. General mayhem.

Then, while traveling in Japan, I visited a school in which the students served lunch to one another, teachers ate with students and everyone took their time. I watched how thoughtfully kids ate. I listened and, without understanding a word, I could tell that lunchtime was an essential part of their social learning.

Once COVID hit, lunch was at home and oddly enough, my husband and I left the kids alone at lunchtime. We figured the mid-day meal could hold their attention, and we could “get through” our work faster and have more family time in the evenings.

But, this summer, I remembered my experience in Japan. I also recalled an article I’d read in The Atlantic entitled, The Importance of Eating Together, which lays out all that we gain from eating with other people—not simply alongside other people but truly sharing the full experience with them. I read more about how eating meals with children leads to healthier eating habits and improved social skills. Studies continue to link eating meals as a family to better outcomes for kids in school and life, including markers like higher grade-point averages, resilience, and self-esteem. As kids age, the research becomes compelling, linking family meals to reduced rates of substance abuse, eating disorders, and depression.

Easy Win—Teach Meals!

The more I thought about it the more I was convinced my family was missing a valuable opportunity to teach, and to bond, every day. So we changed that. I set aside 30 minutes for “Family Lunch” in my work Google calendar each day, and my husband and I started eating with the kids again. Most mornings, we still make lunches ahead of time, but we sit together. At a real table. We talk. We laugh. We break bread together.

How Lunch Has Impacted the Kids

All three of our kids eat a more balanced meal now that we eat together. They help set up and clean up—routines that really slid when they ate on their own. They also share what they’re thinking about, and we have the chance to laugh together—a gift that helps keep us going through the day.

Adding in daily lunch has also helped our kids practice patience. Now, when they come to see us when we are working, we can ask things like, “Could you put that (creation you made) on the kitchen table so we can look at it together during lunch?” or “Can we talk about that at lunch? Best of all, now that they know lunch is coming—they can count on it and, most times, they can wait for it. Remarkably, the interruptions have dropped by more than half.

How Lunch Has Impacted Us

We’re so pleased by how the kids have responded, but the truth is that my husband and I may have benefitted the most. We eat better and more consistently each day, experiencing more steady energy and less stress.

An established lunchtime has also helped me better deal with the challenge of multi-tasking. Like many parents, I’ve struggled badly with working from home and simultaneously being a mom. I used to draw such bright lines—work was at the office and home was all about parenting. Quarantine blurred those lines, and I haven’t felt good enough at either job since. Adding a lunch break has given me a mid-day chance to hop in my phone booth and be supermom again—even if just for 30 minutes.

Easy Ways to Put Meals on Your Syllabus This Fall

Whether your kids are learning from home, heading back to in-person school settings, or a combination, here are several, different ways to work eating together into your daily plan:

  • Lean into breakfast: Read more about why mornings can be truly magical for kids and, if you can, make sure your team sits together for breakfast.
  • Plan an afternoon snack or “tea time:” If you’re all home in the afternoons, make a snack for two. In our culture, snack can often become quite transient and transactional, and kids can snack too frequently as a result. But, snack time can be another wonderful chance to teach kids how to slow down and connect with other people, so take the opportunity if you can.
  • Make dinner a time for discussion: The last meal of the day provides a chance to teach kids how to process their day and their feelings. When we have dinner, we use a ritual called “roses, thorns, and buds.” Each person takes a turn sharing one rose (a highlight), thorn (something challenging), and bud (something they look forward to) from the day.
  • Or focus on dessert: Kids may need to eat earlier than adults, so if a family dinner isn’t in the cards, make time to sit and savor a post-dinner treat with kids before their bedtime. Dinner isn’t necessarily the important part—what matters is the time to connect before the day is done.
  • Take advantage of Saturday and Sunday dinners: Even if most days of the week are harried, you can pick one day to plan, prepare, and enjoy a meal together. If kids are old enough, task them with researching meals in books, online, or by reaching out to family and friends. Use the process to introduce the foods, songs, and stories that are a special part of your family’s history and celebrate the values you hold dearest. These kinds of discussions will help nurture children’s sense of belonging.

And, if you do it each week, kids get the consistent benefit of learning how to eat with others and how to connect socially. Kids can also count on this ritual to reduce their anxiety and give them something to look forward to each week, no matter what’s happening around them. That may be the best gift of all this Fall.

This post originally appeared on Tinkergarten.

After 18 years as an educator, curriculum developer and school leader, Meghan has her dream gig—an entrepreneur/educator/mom who helps families everywhere, including hers, learn outside. Today, Meghan serves as co-founder and Chief Learning Officer of Tinkergarten, the national leader in outdoor play-based learning. 

Dear Diary (early September edition),

It is approximately day 184 of quarantine. I think we are holding it together. In fact, I was so full of thinking I “had it all together” that I completed two Zoom calls and recorded a birthday message for a good friend’s upcoming birthday last week. As I tucked my kids into bed, I gave myself a pat on the back, and I thought to myself, “look at you…. you have it all together.” I worked my day job, exercised, made three square meals a day for my family of four, scheduled my daughter’s math tutor, and facilitated “virtual learning” for my two school-aged kids.

Then I got ready for bed. I realized that, during my two Zoom calls and recorded birthday message, my shirt was on backward. Great! After deciding I should stick to my normal uniform of yoga pants or pajamas, I drifted off to sleep. We woke up two hours later to smelling smoke in our house, but we couldn’t determine where it was coming from. The fire department came and apparently our beloved, often ignored, turtle’s water filter was overheating and smoking. Even Donatello (ie beloved turtle) is looking for a way out of this house! Don’t worry, the turtle will end up in our will because he will live forever (footnote: we assume the turtle is a he. This has not been confirmed). Luckily, we caught the problem before it became an issue… kids didn’t even wake up with all the chaos. And turns out, I went to high school with one of the firefighters, who I haven’t seen in 20 plus years.

So, that was Wednesday. Highlights from Thursday include talking to a reality TV show producer and patiently waiting on hold for almost two hours with our refrigerator manufacturer. It’s been 6 weeks, and apparently, they are really pleased with my patience, and they will get back to me as soon as they can. Don’t hold your breath. It’s a breezy 114 here, so any chance we had to keep food cold was averted because said refrigerator isn’t working.

In the meantime, we got a new fridge because we couldn’t handle or afford to constantly eat out. Still waiting to see if the other fridge will get fixed (they tried five times) or finally just give us a refund. Also, we found out that August was the hottest month ever recorded in Phoenix, and the second hottest month ever recorded was July.  My kids will be online learning for the foreseeable future, and we are adding to my list of things I am unqualified for:

  • #1 not a 6th-grade teacher
  • #2 not a third-grade teacher

We are grateful for our health and safety, and I hope when I look back at this post a year from now, I can laugh as hard as my neighbor did when I told her this story.

Allyson is a mom of two and has more than a decade of experience working in both television news and public relations. From national television shows to top newspapers, Allyson has worked around the world including a travel magazine in London, England, Phoenix TV and local hospital and healthcare association.

Distance learning has its perks—and, let’s face it— its challenges. Getting to log in to class in your PJ bottoms is nice, but online schooling means kids aren’t getting the one-on-one time they may receive in a classroom. A personal tutor takes the guesswork out of getting a child to stay focused during a lesson. The following tutoring companies are offering online platforms that let your kids get the help they need from the comfort of their own home. If your child needs literal face time, these DC tutoring companies will also come to you.  Scroll down for the best online tutoring options  to round out your kiddo’s education and ensure they stay on track this year.

eLearning, computer, headphones, zoom call, computer, covid, distance learning, education
photo: iStock

 

Grade Potential

Grade Potential offers the most extensive menu of subjects, promising tutoring in every subject your child can take from elementary through high school, and even including college tutoring and test prep tutoring. They also offer tutoring seven days a week, from early morning to late night, perfect for working around your busy schedule. Though they do still offer in-person sessions, they have migrated most students and tutors to their online platform, making tutoring even easier and more convenient. Plus, without the overhead of a physical location, they promise lower costs to you.

Online: www.gradepotentialtutoring.com

Club Z! Tutoring Services

Club Z! promises availability 24/7 with a 98% satisfaction rate and an increase of two letter grades in two months. If you’re looking for grade-driven results, Club Z! might be exactly what you need. They offer tutoring in several subjects including pre-k, foreign language, and study skills. Plus, they have tutoring specifically for kiddos with ADHD or learning disabilities.  This service comes with a guarantee; if they don’t find you the right tutor, they’ll cover the cost of your first hour of tutoring.  Need help face-to-face, they can also come to you. 

Online: www.clubztutoring.com

photo: GSCSNJ via Flickr

Kumon

Kumon offers reading and math learning. They offer sessions for preschoolers and for advanced learners with an assessment to determine whether your child needs to catch up a bit or is ready to move ahead of the pack. What really sets Kumon apart is that tutor-led instruction includes independent work. Kumon determines where your child may have gaps in their foundational learning, then encourages your child to engage in self-learning to fill those gaps and build on their new foundation. Unlike traditional tutoring, where an instructor offers knowledge that your child may or may not fully grasp, Kumon allows your child to feel the thrill of seeking out education on their own and putting it to use. Kumon offers an online platform, but their regional centers are open and available for face-to-face help. 

Locations: Georgetown, Arlington-Yorktown, Bethesda-Brookmont, Bethesda-Chevy Chase, Silver Spring, McLean, Falls Church, Kensington

Online: www.kumon.com

Launch Math & Science Centers

Launch offers a robust menu of tutoring options  that focus on math and science. Launch makes math and science fun, but perhaps one of its most unique and useful features is that they make the work provided by your child’s school the focus of each session. Each minute of the session will not only ensure your child is gaining a better understanding of the subject, but is productively spent on work that gets counted towards their grades rather than random practice assignments.They have remote learning support, called Launch Study Hall, as well as summer and holiday camps, enrichment classes, and even an option to customize a class for your child and a few friends.

Online:: launchmath.com

photo: Rawpixels 

 

TestingMom.com

If your kid does well in school overall but they struggle with tests, TestingMom.com is the answer. With thousands of questions from the most-given major tests, your student will have plenty of chances to practice their testing skills in a low-pressure environment long before the big day arrives. TestingMom.com offers printables, interactive games, and practice tests so that the learning is always fun and interesting. They use a unique system to help your child reinforce existing abilities and beat common test-taking mistakes so that they can knock it out of the park when they take the real test.

Online: testingmom.com

—Wendy Miller

RELATED STORIES: 

110+ Online Learning Resources for Your Kids from Toddler to Teen

Check Out These Learning Resources Amid Coronavirus School Closures

 

Normally it’s just kids who get back-to-school jitters. But this year, with LA schools going virtual, parents are feeling plenty of their own anxiety. To help prepare you for all the at-home learning, we talked to a few Los Angeles teachers, who revealed their insider tips. Keep calm and read on!

Stick to Traditions

Pixabay

"Parents should be treating this as the beginning of any other school year," says third grade teacher Katherine Stott. "Take first day of school pictures, get some new school supplies/outfits and get excited!" Making school feel as normal and familiar as possible will help young kids acclimate to the change.

Maximize Your Mornings

istock

Kiddos should show up for virtual learning just as they would for a regular day of in-person learning, says third grade teacher Gabrielle Radonsky. She recommends waking up at least a half hour before school starts, so kids have plenty of time to eat breakfast, get dressed, comb their hair and brush teeth, and come prepared to their meeting. 

If there's time, Ms. Stott suggests trying get out and take a walk around the neighborhood before the distance learning begins. "This will make school feel more like school," she says. 

Get into the Zone

Julia Cameron via Pexels

It's important for kids to have a designated school zone for online learning. Kindergarten teacher Jocelyn Bresnick says that a child's workspace should be "away from distractions, other people, food and toys."

One spot to avoid? "The bed," says fifth grade teacher Anastasia Theo. "You would be surprised how many students join lessons form there!" You want your child to be sitting up, alert and engaged. 

A final piece of advice from Ms. Radonsky: "Keep the space consistent even if it's the dining room table." 

Listen Up

If there are multiple children, plus mom and dad all working at home, it can be hard for kids to tune out distractions. Ms. Theo recommends getting kid-friendly headphones to "reduce background noise and help students focus." 

Give Some Space

Rawpixel

While it may be tempting to hover over kids during their virtual lessons, it's better to take a step back. "Parents should not be part of the lesson; they should check in with their child after the lesson just like they would when their child gets home from school," says Ms. Theo. She suggests asking your child to show you their work for the day, or start a discussion about what they learned. 

Say Yes, But...

Pexels

When it comes to sidestepping schoolwork, kids are mini masterminds. As Ms. Bresnick tells us, she lives by this strategy: Say yes, but on your terms. For example, she explains, if your child asks, Can I have a snack?, reply with, Yes! After you finish this last page.

Stay Positive

A grade-school boy receives a kiss of encouragement from his mom before school
Garrett Jackson via Unsplash

"Remember that this is new for everyone and try to be positive," encourages Ms. Theo. "Kids are more likely to look at this negatively if they are constantly hearing their parents complain about it."

featured photo: Julia Cameron via Pexels

–Shannan Rouss

RELATED STORIES: 

Free Interactive Lessons, Apps & More from LA Museums

The Best Learning Toys Games and Gear for Kids

Do you ever worry that your kids aren’t spending enough time washing their hands or doing a thorough enough job? Especially now, it is important that everyone gets their hands clean.

Color Clean Soap was created by Michael Raymond, during the COVID-19 stay-at-home orders after he noticed his children struggling to thoroughly wash their hands.  

Color Clean Hand Soap

This patent-pending, one-of-a-kind formula, Color Clean Hand Soap is designed to ensure children and adults fully wash their hands by visibly highlighting unwashed areas. The visual soap is non-staining and scrubs off easily. A delayed, color-fading technology alerts users when they have washed their hands for an adequate amount of time. 

Using premium quality, organic ingredients like coconut oil, olive oil, essential oils and shea butter, Color Clean Hand Soap is free from sulfates or other harmful chemicals. The color technology is non-toxic and uses FDA food grade colorants to ensure maximum safety. 

With three varieties to choose from, Blue Citrus, Green Grapefruit and Ruby Red, children and adults can pick their favorite variety to keep their hands clean. 

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Michael Raymond

RELATED STORIES

Paw Patrol’s New Hand Washing Song Will Get Your Kids to the Sink

Kristen Bell Shares Pepper Trick to Teach Kids The Importance of Hand Washing

Sing These Songs While Washing Your Hands

The National Park Service is working to make all parks safe for visitors and has made adjustments for guests visiting Yosemite this summer. In lieu of camping cancellations, visitors will now need to reserve park tickets to enter.

Each day 1,700 day-use park passes will be made available via online reservation for entry Jun. 11 through Oct. 31. Reservations will be required, with only one needed per vehicle and all occupants for $33 per car.

Reservations go on sale at 7 a.m. PST daily 48 hours in advance and on July 1st, August 1st, and September 1st for one month in advance. So, tickets for entry Aug. 1-31 will be available starting Jul. 1.

In order to gain access, all visitors must arrive on the day reserved between 5 a.m. and 11 p.m. Day use access will be good for seven consecutive days after, including the day of arrival.

Annual or lifetime pass holders can use their passes as the entrance fee, plus a non-refundable $2 reservation fee. Eligible passes include Yosemite National Park Annual Pass, Interagency Annual Pass, Interagency Senior Pass, Interagency Access Pass, Interagency Volunteer Pass, Interagency Military Pass, Interagency 4th Grade Pass, Golden Age, Golden Access.

If you have an overnight reservation in the park, no day use reservation is needed. However, all visitors will need to show their permit reservation conformation at the entrance station.

––Karly Wood

 

RELATED STORIES

Kennedy Space Center Continues to Open New Attractions

The Broadway League Announces Fall Performance Cancellations

Disneyland Delays Reopening Schedule & Awaits State Guidelines