Local author’s book helps young readers dash into the Holidays page 4
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Volume 14, Number 49 • Dec. 5 to 11, 2014
South Charlotte schools ace academic competition by Courtney Schultz courtney@thecharlotteweekly.com
Taking it to the mat
Yogarteen participants learn to stretch outside the classroom through a 10-week program that emphasizes concentration and compassion. See Courtney Schultz’s story on page 10. Courtney Schultz/SCW photo
Three south Charlotte schools qualified for the state finals of the Twelve academic competition that will take place Dec. 13 at Rogers-Herr Middle School in Durham. Myers Park and Ardrey Kell high schools qualified in the high school division, and Jay M. Robinson Middle School qualified in the middle school division. Twelve is a knowledge-based competition, orchestrated by the North Carolina Association for Scholastic Activities (NCASA), which tests students’ knowledge on primary core subject as well as other topics, such as sports and technology. At the competition, 12 topics are presented and students from each school are placed into four groups of three students to answer questions about three topics each. “At the kick-off, the grouping of the 10 (see Twelve on page 13)
Playtime Sheets offers educational fun before bedtime Charlotte-based toy company debuts signature product by Josh Whitener josh@thecharlotteweekly.com
It all started with a song on the radio that wasn’t exactly kid friendly. Kevin Gatlin picked up his son from school one day and turned on the car radio, only to find his then-8-year-old son singing along to the hook of a “bad song.” “He was 8 years old and didn’t know what
he was saying, but I did,” Gatlin said. Shaken by the situation, Gatlin searched to find something suitable for his children to listen to in the car, but everything he discovKevin Gatlin ered geared toward kids was either a storytelling CD or a sing-along album – something he said neither parents nor children want to listen to for extended
periods of time. Gatlin remembered the “A-B-C, 1-2-3” game his mom, a retired schoolteacher, used to play with him during car rides and chose to create a character that could guide children through various games they could play during road trips. Thus, the “Ride Along with Dooey” CD and Gatlin’s own toy company, the Charlotte-based Playtime EDventures, were born. Inspired by the success and positive feedback to “Ride Along with Dooey,” which
includes more than 25 interactive car games, Gatlin chose to take another leap of faith and produce Playtime EDventures’s second product, Playtime Sheets, a product which recently made its debut at Charlotte’s Southern Christmas Show. The product is a “unique bedding solution that combines the comfort of traditional bedding with cognitive stimulation and creativity,” according to a news release. Consisting of real twin-sized bed sheets (see Playtime on page 5)
INDEX: News Briefs, 6; Crime Blotter, 7; Scores, 8; Education, 11; Faith, 16; Culinary, 18; Calendar, 20; Sports, 21; Classifieds, 27