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Livingston

S.E. Livingston

S.E. Livingston is a wife, mother and teacher who writes for family and education newsletters in northern Minnesota. Livingston writes once a month for the Budgeteer.
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Articles

Column: Small courtesies, common good

Ours is a city of small courtesies. Not small as in mean or stingy: small, as in tiny in stature, pocket-sized.

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Column: Reading — it doesn’t have to be a solitary activity

Some people are passionate about politics. Some people are passionate about organic food. Some people are passionate about NASCAR racing. I am passionate about book clubs. Fortunately for this world, there are a lot of us out there.

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Column: Outdoor classroom experience is dynamic

Five years ago my husband chaperoned a trip for the tough to Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center. He and the children came home with harrowing tales of winter survival, a ropes course and skin-chapping adventures in the snow.

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Column: Dyslexia is not the last word on ability PressPass

In an effort to understand the difficulty my son struggles with, I began a self-education process on dyslexia, its causes, and mostly how to help with it.

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Column: A prescription against school shootings PressPass

The NRA’s prescription for eliminating the tragedy of school shootings won’t work well for Duluth.

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Column: Finding hope, physical and mental fitness at the YMCA PressPass

I love to witness the ignition of one person’s bright idea fanning a flame to warm a community for the better.

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Column: Call of Duty — Yard Ops PressPass

Sipping a cup of chai tea, I glance out the window in time to see a green-clad, man-sized boy run past. A shout followed by the rat-a-tat of rapid gunfire — howling clamor replaces the shots. I take another sip of tea.

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Column: Math is easier when chocolate chip cookies are at stake

I had to look twice. Principal Obst was standing in the school hallway directing parents toward the music concert. (Expected visual.) What arrested my attention was the massive snake wrapped around the woman’s torso. (Utterly unexpected visual.)

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Column: Kids can live without TV

My children blame Michelle Obama for changing their evening TV watching, but it isn’t actually her fault.

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When it comes to bullying, every child should have a safe harbor

Alana Friedman knows all about safe harbors. In the 1950s and 60s she grew up in the tightly knit West End Duluth community where nobody was a stranger.

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Columns

Principal offers parenting principles

When my son, a Denfeld student, heard I was having coffee with Tonya Sconiers, the school’s recently appointed principal, he blanched.

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Peace on earth? Not likely, but it’s not as bad as you think

The worst sound in the middle of a celebratory slumber is that of crashing glass. As consciousness begins its meek tapping, one’s feeble brain begins to crank away at reality. Why is that glass shattering? New Year’s Eve left glassware on the kitchen counter. Is the cat walking across the counter? Is blitzing fluted champagne glasses onto the tile floor so satisfying that he can’t stop himself? Something more sinister begins to eat away at the edge of the reasoning. That’s not glassware. That is bigger –bigger like a living room window – bigger like somebody outside of our locked doors wanting to get INTO our house badly enough to smash through.

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Kids’ field trip changes mom’s perspective PressPass

S.E. LIVINGSTON: One of my kids’ favorite school field trips was when they were studying government and visited the holding cells for the accused criminals at the St. Louis County Sheriff’s office. Kids love educational experiences promising Tasers, stainless steel cells, and maybe even a bad guy, while the armed tour guides wear handcuffs and talk tough. For pure excitement, it beat the Karpeles Museum tour hands down.

No free lunch? Not so, if you’re a hungry kid in Duluth PressPass

Last summer, my kids and I sat in the cafeteria at Lincoln Park Elementary School. As they enjoyed their smiley fries and hamburgers, I was looking around at all the happy, munching kids. The tables were filled with children from daycare centers, youth day camps, vacation Bible school programs and many who just showed up, with and without adults. All these kids were benefiting from the USDA’s Summer Food Service Program, but, I wondered, with the demise of Lincoln Park School, what will happen to these hungry kids?

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This redheaded stalker is tough to outfox PressPass

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A parent’s philosophical dance with Santa

My son John has decided to test the Santa Claus legend.

Potatoes, poison and purging our puppy

Budgeteer columnist S.E. Livingston writes about her birthday, when she came home to find one or both dogs had feasted ... possibly on mouse poison.