Thursday, 2 of September of 2010

Archives from month » February, 2009

Do you have an unusual testimony or ministry?

Then Grace Talk Soup is looking for YOU!   Do you have a unique testimony?  Did you lead someone to the Lord?  Do you have a ministry or mission in life that would be of interest to my listeners?  Contact me jojo@artofeloquence.com and tell me a bit about it!  I am looking to schedule guests for 2009.

Grace Talk Soup is where you can find me “Boldly Serving Up God’s Word with a Side Order of Grace and Humor” each Thursday morning at 8am PST/11am EST.

I share news of importance to the Christian community as well as  tips on effective communication, especially where it relates to sharing and defending the Christian faith.   My guests share their testminony, ministry and their missions.  I also have Open Discussion shows on various topics of interest to the Christian community where you can come and share your thoughts and experiences.  A great way for you or your teens to hone your communication and public speaking skills!

Some of My Former Guests:

Stephen Kendrick, Co author of The Love Dare and Fireproof!

Pastor Bob Cushman, author of What if You Pray?

Lorrie Flem, publisher of TEACH Magazine

Bette Dowdell, author of How to Be a Christian without being Annoying

FIMM, Hear Foot in Mouth Man speak for the first time!

Capt’n Richie, Coma Survivor!

Cindy Rushton, of Talk A Latte and UHSE shares her testimony on air for the first time!

Cathi-Lyn Dyck, shares her story of the side effects of her abortion and what the Drs don’t tell you!

Bill Phillips, Street Evangelist in the news who was threatened with arrest as he shared the Gospel!

Open Discussion Topics coming up:

March 12th, Hecklers and the Lost Art of Civility

Later this year: How Does God Speak to You?, Big Church or Small Church?, What is Grace?, The Language of Leadership, Christian Buzz Words, What is Your Communication Personality?, 21 Days to More Godly Communication, The Bible on Parenting, Marriage…

Come share YOUR unique story!

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Comments Off

10 Signs Your Child Might Be Gifted

10 Signs Your Child Might Be Gifted:

1. He has a picture of Albert Einstein over his crib.

2. He teaches himself to read at the age of two using DVD subtitles and video games.

3. He prefers Jeopardy over Cartoons at age 4.

4. At six he has a nasty habit of correcting mom’s spelling.

5. He points out that studies show that forced napping can, in fact, be hazardous to one’s psyche!

6. He reads the dictionary for FUN!

7. He postulates the meaning of life for five hours, but cannot sit still for five minutes in order to eat!

8. He can spend hours on the internet pondering the answer to life’s questions, but he can’t figure out how to put away his toys.

9. He understands the effect of too much sugar on the body, but decides to take his chances with the candy bar due to the fact that he found several flaws in the research.

10. As a teen, he says he knows more than you about just about anything and …well, by now he probably does!

From JoJo’s Purple Crayon
Learning Speech Communication Skills
can ALSO be fun with Art of Eloquence!

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

1 comment

Advanced Speech SOLD OUT! Couple copies of Preschool left: $7.95!

Just wanted to update you all!  Things were happening so fast today!

We are completely SOLD OUT of four out of the five of our hard copy titles!  The only title we have left is Say What You Mean for Preschoolers…and we only have a couple copies left of that one!

swm-p-thumbnail13

In six years of business, we have NEVER sold our studies for such an incredibly low price, but we need these out the door so we can begin the exciting task of reworking the website to accommodate the digital versions which will be expanded and will include embedded links to some fabulous extra resources!

If you have a preschooler and you didn’t get your copy of Say What You Mean for Preschoolers yet, as of this posting, we still have a couple left!  The discount is already on the product page so just click here to order Say What You Mean for Preschoolers at the incredibly low price of ONLY $7.95 while they last!

I will update you when we have the new digital versions available for you to look see!

God bless everyone!

JoJo

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Comments Off

We have NEVER done this before! ONLY $7.95!

I am just about to post this to my mailing list!

swm-a-thumbnail12
We only have a handful of hard copy books left that are available for purchase: ONLY 8 Say What You Mean for Preschoolers and 9 Say What You Mean: An Advanced Speech Course remain.  The other titles are completely sold out.  After they’re gone, you will no longer be able to buy a hard copy version of these studies since we are going to a digital format.

So if you prefer to use hard copy, bound curricula, this is your last chance to secure one of the last remaining copies for yourself.

Not only that, but in the six years Art of Eloquence has been in business, we have NEVER swm-p-thumbnail12offered our studies for this incredibly low price.  And believe me, it will never happen again!  At $7.95 (each plus shipping) we barely cover our production cost.  That’s almost a 70% discount!

The only reason we’re doing this is because my husband insisted that we clear out these last remaining items immediately so we can make changes to our website in order to accommodate the new electronic versions of these popular studies.

After they’re gone, not only will hard copies be unavailable, but the price will go back up to $24.95.  So don’t miss out.  Act now and get your copy today!


To order Say What You Mean for Preschoolers click here!

To order Say What You Mean: An Advanced Speech Course click here!


And hurry!  At this price, these few remaining books will be gone in a matter of hours.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Comments Off

Pro Homeschooling Documentary, Not so Pro Christian?

If you are a long time reader of Communication FUNdamentals, you will recall that about a year ago our family had agreed to be filmed for a documentary that a USC grad student was doing on homeschooling for a local cable TV and internet show.  I have to admit being a bit nervous about whether or not a positive image of my family and homeschooling in general would survive the cutting room floor.

Since we are members of HSLDA, I called and spoke with Michael Smith to ask his advice.  He shared a story with me about how his words had been twisted in an interview by the editing process but that, in his opinion, any publicity for homeschooling is good publicity.  He advised us to pray on it and, if we felt lead to, consent to the interview.   We discussed it and prayed over it as a family and decided to allow the camera to film “A day in the life of the Tabares homeschooling family.”

It was an exciting day where we met the producer who was also to be our cameraman.  She was a very nice young woman who asked us a great deal of questions, filmed each family member’s answer and even went with us to two different outside events.  She filmed my daughter going to her not-so-local public school for her AP classes in the morning.  She even went with us to film both of the kids at karate class where my daughter was one of the black belt instructors.

We felt she was, as they say on Fox News, fair and balanced.  She asked a good number of open ended questions as well as questions that might reveal any difficulties about homeschooling.  Overall, we felt it a good experience for the family.

Just the other day, we finally received a link to the online video segment of the show.  It is actually a very positive piece on homeschooling and I pray that theme reaches many, but we were a bit disappointed with the way our Christian family was portrayed in contrast to the other family that was interviewed. I’ll give you the link so you can judge for yourself.

First we noticed some obvious errors-one was a major typo at the end where they reported that my daughter is now attending “Vanterbilt” University.  That should be spelled  Vanderbilt.  Sorry all you Commodores!  The other was when the narrator reported the public high school where my daughter was taking a few AP classes was in Hesperia.  I wish it had been in Hesperia!  It certainly would have been a much faster commute and a lot easier on the old wallet as gas was at it’s all time HIGH then! ROFL  Granite Hills High School is in Apple Valley.

The disappointment, though, is due to the way in which they seemed to have made a conscious decision to leave on the cutting room floor all of the footage that shows our family as active in the “real world” outside of our family.  The producer told us she was interviewing a few families to compare them, but the way it was edited leaves the impression that a Christian homeschooling family is lonely and secluded from the rest of the world.  I guess it goes back to the age old question of socialization as if it may not be a problem in secular families, but may still be for Christian homeschoolers.

For example, in contrast to the active, bustling and colorful environment of the other family, they showed my daughter sharing about her frustration with her public school classmates for interrupting class to ask irrelevant questions. They never showed her teaching karate class where she was one of the black belt instructors for two years.  They never mentioned that she was in a performance choir that traveled and did concerts.  They never mentioned the schedule she kept with her friends or the times she was able to raise money to fly to Texas and D.C. to attend various leadership conferences and other events with young people from all over the nation.

They showed my son playing a game of pool by himself as he talks about a problem he had with a neighbor boy.  They never showed the footage of him at karate or talked about all the other activities he was involved in that year.  They also had no way of knowing  that this neighbor boy was a problem for many of the families in the neighborhood.

My daughter was upset for my son because they updated each of the homeschooled children at the end but never included my son.

Am I sorry we did the interview? No!  I think it was a good experience for the kids.  I also think it will help homeschooling.  It’s actually a very pro homeschooling piece.  But you judge for yourself .  Here is the direct link to the homeschooling segment of this show.

Please share what you think about it.  Do you think it helps homeschooling?  Do you feel they were at all biased against Christian homeschoolers?  Did it just come off this way?  Or are we being a bit sensitive?

What say you?

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

8 comments

Foot in Mouth Disease

foot-in-mouth-man-thumbnail1You’ve all heard the expression, “Open mouth; insert foot!” I call it Foot in Mouth Disease and feet are the delicacy of FIMM: Foot in Mouth Man.  But FIMM is so funny precisely because we all can relate. We have all been FIMMpersonators at one time or another.  It’s just that FIMM sticks his foot in his mouth so often he has Athlete’s Tongue!

There is a story floating around the internet that the Arizona Republic was supposed to have reported.  I cannot find the original story, but that is not unusual as I have been known to search Google for “pickles” and end up with information on juice boxes!

The story is about a man named Terry Mikel who was reportedly pulled over for speeding while heading to Tuscon.  The officer gave him a warning and told him to “drive safe”.  Mr. Mikel just couldn’t help himself.  He was apparently a card carrying member of the “Conversation Correction Patrol.”  He told the officer that he should have said, “slow down and drive safely” at which point the officer handed him a $72 speeding ticket!

I don’t know if there really is a Terry Mikel or if he really received a speeding ticket exactly this way, but I am sure of one thing.  Human beings find it exceedingly difficult to hold their tongues!

“Set a watch, O LORD, before my mouth; keep the door of my lips.” -Psalm 141:3

Not having the discipline to keep the door of your lips will cost you!  But, if you think $72 is costly, think again at how much more trouble our mouths have gotten us into!

How much would it cost you if you didn’t keep the door of your lips with your customer?   Your employee?  Your BOSS?  What price would you put on a friendship?  On your marriage?  On your relationship with your children?

Keeping watch over our tongues and our mouths takes skill and practice.  Is it ever fully achieved?  No!

“But the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.” -James 3:8

But there are many lessons in God’s Word that teach us to attempt to control our mouths and others that tell us of the blessings we can bring forth with it.

“Pleasant words are as an honeycomb, sweet to the soul, and health to the bones.” -Proverbs 16:24

The Bible is full of hundreds of scriptures that teach us about the importance of how we communicate with each other.  If the Lord felt it important enough to put in His Word hundreds of times, it’s a subject He must want us to study!  Amen?

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

1 comment

Question of the WK: How do you say ORANGE?

How it works:
Each Monday I ask a thought provoking question about life.  Pose the same question to your blog readers on your own blog along with your answer to the question.  Then come back here and post a comment with a link to your blog post so we can all read everyone’s answers!  It’s been a lot of fun getting to know my readers and their readers and so on and so on…

This week’s question:
Ok this week’s not as thought provoking but it is FUN!  How do you say ORANGE?  Would an AHRENJ by any other name taste as sweet?

JoJo’s Answer:

Until a few months ago, my kids were raised in Southern California where everyone pronounces it “or’-rinj”.  They poke fun at me because I was raised in New York where they pronounce it “ah’-renj”.  My 9 y/o son is convinced that, if you say it differently than he does, you’re just plain …WRONG! lol

It got me thinking about accents and how the same word can be pronounced differently in different parts of the country.  I posed the question to the folks in my Yahoo group, Homeschooling with Humor, and received various other responses.

Apparently Ohio folks say “or’-inj” while those from Jersey say “arrr’-inj” and  Texans say”or’-unj”.  New Englander’s say it as one syllable, “ornj”.  Then there’s my dad (who is from NY) and says orange juice like this, “ah’-ren-juice” with no break between the orange and the juice.


How do you say ORANGE and where are you from?
Post your answers on your blog and come back here and put your link in so we can read it!  If you don’t have a blog, just post your answers here.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

1 comment

12y/o’s Abortion Speech: “A person’s a person no matter how small!”

This is 12 y/o Lia from Canada.  After initially being disqualified because her topic was Abortion and she mentioned the Creator in her speech, she is the winner of her school’s speech contest.  It is an excellent speech using not only good debate points but she is gracious in doing so.  I love the ending as she quotes from Horton Hears a Who, “After all, a person’s a person no matter how small!”

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

3 comments

Pride Goeth Before the Blog Gremlins

After taking quite the many days to get my new blog just exactly the way I wanted it, I was so proud of myself that I posted my naive exuberance here on Communication FUNdamentals to many congratulations and At-A-Gals!  Immediately following, I posted another few blog posts  that somehow, without provocation, caused most of my blog to enter the Witness Protection Program becoming invisible to the naked eye when viewed by those with Internet Explorer (IE).

As many of you know, JoJo don’t know HTML so, if kicking my computer doesn’t fix the problem, I’m at a loss!  I turned to those more Technologically Savvy than I and was told the following:

1.    My habit of copying and pasting from Microsoft sources like Outlook and Word have messed up the HTML code so I should put the text into Outlook as plain text and then copy and paste it.  (WordPress just turns it back into HTML and on we go…)
2.    You have 150 errors on your template so you need to replace your template and it will fix the problem. (No Soap!)
3.    Your little purple crayons are causing the problem so take them out and all will be right with the blog world. (Not unless the new HTML code has to ferment)

Yesterday I posted my Friday Funnies and VIOLA!  Part of my template is back on IE and you can actually see my post!  You can’t see the right and bottom side bars, but having readers able to view the blog posts is kind of important too!

I am thinking that perhaps I can oust the Blog Gremlins each time I write a new post pushing the bad HTML code further down into my blog so as to reveal the bright shiny new code.

Can you all tell me what you see when you look at Communication FUNdamentals now and what browser you are using when you do?  To quote Verizon, “Can you hear me now?”

Thank you.
One significantly confused, Technologically-Challenged JoJo!

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

6 comments

Dr. Seuss Meets the CPSIA!

I have been blogging about the Child Protection Safety Initiative Act for a few months now.  It went into effect under cover of darkness and was supposedly designed to protect our children from lead poisoning which was a real concern born out of the state of toy making in China.  It blossomed as UNTHINKING legislators threw law together with the intent only to make themselves look like they were actually doing something about the problem.

However, instead of requiring testing from toys coming from China or other foreign countries, the law requires every product manufactured for children 12 and under to go through rigorous and expensive testing in order to be compliant.  This included things that were never known to contain lead or other harmful elements like clothing and books.  In fact, originally, it required testing of each lot.  So if you were a used clothing store, you would have to test each individual garment in order to be compliant!

Fortunately, most THINKING people knew this was bad law which would put many small businesses OUT of business and they have been successful in getting many exceptions added to the law.  It is impossible for them to enforce anyway, but it may take several years before it is all ironed out.  You see, instead of just scrapping the bad law and rewriting it in a less confusing and restrictive way, they will do what most politicians do and throw lots more words at the law and hope that the good words will cancel out the bad words and,  in the end, the ones that stick will make sense!

The Lord put a great deal of creativity in the hearts of His children and when they are justifiably outraged, they can be quite creatively humorous.  Currently there are a few YouTube videos dealing with this issue.  One is of a Faux Senator who explains how difficult his job is NOT to read all the laws that come to him for his signature each week.

And then there is this adorable social commentary by Heather Idoni of Homeschooler’s Notebook.  She and a friend wrote Dr. Seuss Meets the CPSIA.  They have also issued a challenge to all you creative writers out there who love Dr. Seuss to come up with your own social commentary on a subject near and dear to you in the style of Theodore Geisel (Dr. Seuss).

If you want to try your hand here, please post a comment with a few Dr. Seuss-like lines.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

2 comments