Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Darwin's 200th Birthday Bash was a blast!

What a great party! Over 100 people ushered in Darwin's third century with style and fun.

Here's a slideshow, below. If you want to see it with the picture titles and captions too, click here and select "Show Info" on the upper right.

To all who could make it - great to see you and thanks for coming!

To all who couldn't - maybe next time!

Friday, February 13, 2009

Celebrating Darwin's birthday with the kids

This weekend is the perfect time to celebrate Darwin's birthday with the kids, coming as it does on the heels of the big man's big 200th yesterday.

Here are some simple ways to celebrate:

Sing Happy Birthday

We all know the monkey version, right? Here's one way to sing it:

Happy birthday to you, you live in a zoo
You look like a monkey; he's my cousin too!

Sometimes kids think humans are descended from monkeys, when we actually share a common ancestor and so are more like distant cousins. We're also not monkeys, we're apes....but that didn't fit into the song so well. Anyway, it will get the conversation rolling.

Read a good book

Our bibliography of children's books about evolution includes 89 titles sorted by age of reader (3-15) and type of book (comic, biography, etc.) We also flag our Top Twelve picks. Take a look at our list, and then head to the library or bookstore.


Take a climb on the tree of life


First, find a plant or animal together. Really. Go to the park and see what you find. Or just look under a rock in your backyard. Find the nearest houseplant, fish tank, or bathtub mold, anything.

Specimen in hand, now your job is to locate it on the tree of life. At the vast Tree of Life project, you can climb onto a branch and see gorgeous photos of representative animals. Climb around for a while and everything starts making a whole lot of systematic sense. Where does your sample fit?

I also love this page of beautiful circular tree of life diagrams put together by a couple of professors at the University of Texas. Scroll down to the last diagram, which is simplified and terrific for talking with older kids. Print it out, hang it on the wall, and let the conversation roll.


And of course, consider a Giant Timeline!


At Charlie's Playhouse we're all about celebrating evolution with kids all the time. If you've got a Giant Timeline floor mat or Creature Cards, pull 'em out and see what happens. If you don't have one, get one!

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Hey kids: meet Darwin (age 7) and Huxley (age 5)


And, no, they aren't nicknames!

Charles Darwin and Thomas "Darwin's Bulldog" Huxley are the namesakes of these two proud and lucky kids from New Jersey. According to their mom Tamara, Darwin (7, on the left) is "cautiously optimistic," and Huxley (5, on the right) is "usually up for anything."

The family aren't related to Darwin or Huxley, and they aren't professional scientists. But as humanists, Tamara and her husband "feel focusing on science and reality is very important. We wanted unusual names, but ones people could pronounce and spell. Interestingly, very few people we come into contact with in the general population get the reference!"

When asked about their names, Dar and Hux said: "It is fun because [Darwin and Huxley] are famous and it gets us into animals and having this name makes me not want to get animals killed." Looks like we've got a couple of budding naturalists there....

So congratulations on some fine names, boys, and best of luck carrying them through life!