Moxie Girl Joelle is a designer and author from San Diego.

She sings music your grandparents like and makes a damn fine martini. Read more...





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Ah, Bitches, I’ve Missed You So…

Joelle said at some point on November 18, 2008

What is it about women (and men, too, but in a different way) that makes them go out of their way to be completely unwarranted shrews? I just don’t get it, though I suppose this is me being a completely warranted shrew.  cheese I expect to get some dirt slung my way for some of my more candid reviews about certain establishments, but a nitpick on a 5-star review buried in the annals of my Yelp profile?  I had to laugh… and yeah, I took the bait because it’s baffling to me how small some people can be and… well, sometimes it’s just fun.

Yelp Twattery

Hooked On Leapfrog Worked for Me

Joelle said in the late morning on November 7, 2008

"That book doesn't talk!"
That's because it's a book, kid.

While contemplating what to get Reilly for Christmas and his birthday this year, I’ve started noticing toy commercials more.  I tend be one to give creative or fun educational toys. Yes, I’m the aunt you can thank for the washable markers and the “Make your Own Stalagmites” kits.  It’s not Grand Theft Auto: Punch a Hooker Edition, but they’ll thank me later.

Anyway, I’ve been seeing a lot of these Leapfrog books advertised lately. I’m not really sure what I think about it. I’m not an education expert or a teacher or a children’s development specialist, so I don’t know how to measure scientifically the impact these books have on reading. But, and correct me if I’m wrong here, I kind of think if you drag a pen over the word and hear the word read to you, that ceases to be reading. I’d say that’s listening. 

I don’t entirely get it. Sure, it seems cool and fun and how exciting that the book talks!  I see the appeal.  I was a little old for them, but I had step-sisters, so I remember those books with the buttons down the side that added sound effects to your story. It’s not like the concept of sound in books is new or unusual. I’d go as far as fun. But, I don’t really see how dragging the pen over a word and hearing it said for you teaches you to read it, but maybe it does.  What happened to sounding things out? What about recognizing the letters and learning what sounds those letters make and what happens when you string them together?  Maybe I’m just old school.

I know people learn other languages that way. Rosetta Stone uses an visual/audio connection to teach you to speak a foreign language, so I suppose the same principle applies here.  Perhaps the combination of using both hearing and seeing helps solidify the information. I’ve always been more an auditory learner, was never one for much note-taking in school. I spent too much time writing things down and I’d miss the next thing the lecturer was saying, so I just paid attention unless it was imperative I take note.  So I can understand how hearing the words read would help drive the point home.

I guess I just wonder where the line is drawn between reading and storytime. Or maybe its teaching that reading is play… and I agree it can be. Reading is awesome and as a child, I was a voracious reader.  Adding the voices of the characters and hearing the story told for them robs the child of a piece of their imagination, part of the joys of reading.  The ability to create your own scenario when you read is part of the fun of it, not having it spoon fed to you in the voice of Jack Black.

I have mixed feelings. What do you think?

Look What the Bun Dragged In

Joelle said at some point on October 24, 2008

oh, HAI!
Bunny nose. smile

I’ve wanted to blog about a zillion times and then I open this publish page and stare at it until I’ve talked myself out of whatever it was I wanted to blog about to begin with.

But, I refuse to give it up. I just can’t bring myself to do it.  Sure, I write a lot more on Yelp and Twitter lately and of course, sometimes on Moxie Design Studios, but this is my blog… so much of my current existence is wrapped up in blogs that not having one of my own would be like separating Linus from his blanket. Sure, I’ve changed the name twice, but I eventually came back to where I started.

Blogging is a weird thing… it’s changed so much and I think one’s expectations regarding blogging have changed. A lot of us have been blogging since ads were considered “sell-out”, when the idea of a fancy design was having some celebrity photo slapped in your banner, when people actually commented in order to get traffic and everyone (including myself) didn’t lurk via RSS feed.  Now, while progress is good and I’m on board with it, I get a little nostalgic for those times… when blogging didn’t feel so cliquey and I met some of the best people I’ve ever known.

I love blogging. I am a blogger. I cannot separate myself from that label, despite my recent waning of interest in writing about myself.  There’s a certain element of “people pleasing” that happens when you blog and while I’ve never been a balls-out, emotional blogger sharing intimate details, I do feel myself holding back sometimes, feeling the need to keep up “appearances"… though I’m not sure what appearances those would be. And because I find that’s disingenuous, I just choose to not blog at all.  I’d rather shoot my mouth off in 140 characters or less.

read more >

Just Call Me J. Diddy

Joelle said at some point on October 2, 2008

Apparently, I rhyme. Not all the time, but sometimes I rhyme. This was something I never knew about myself until a friend pointed it out.  When Kathy was here, even she agreed.  I just naturally rhyme; it’s not something I foresee. I can’t do it when I write, it’s like I’m trying too hard. It comes off trite, like a greeting card.

But I do it when I talk and I have no idea why. Is it because I sing? It’s not like I try. Should I have been a writer? I guess I already am. Should I have been a rapper?  I don’t have big enough pants.

Ok, that last one was a stretch.

But I guess I really do rhyme when I talk and now I can’t stop hearing it.  I have to acknowledge when I rhyme now… “I was rhyming.” like anyone else gives a shit.  But I guess people do, who knew? It’s not like I notice when others rhyme, it’s not my business. I don’t have the time.

See? Right then I wasn’t even trying.  *sigh*

A Bunny Breakfast!

Joelle said in the early morning on September 30, 2008

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Two Weeks!

Hello, hello!  This is just a quick note to remind you that our schedules will be opening for project review two weeks from today, beginning December 2nd.  We will begin contacting anyone who wished to remain on our list from the Fall review first and then move on to those who … MORE...

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