Welcome One And All

Monday, January 01, 2007

BabyNames.com Announces Top Names of 2006


LOS ANGELES, Dec. 11 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the popular website BabyNames.com, Ava and Aidan were the top names for 2006. For the first time in five years, Madison slipped from the number one girl's name to number four. On the boys' side, rhyming names Aiden, Caden, Braden and Jaden continue to dominate the charts.

The BabyNames.com Top Names List is calculated from the favorite name lists of over a million site members for the year 2006. "Celebrity culture always has an influence on naming trends," says Jennifer Moss, founder and CEO of BabyNames.com, "but it seems like it has increased in recent years."

Moss says the name Ava started becoming popular after celebrity couple Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillipe chose the name for their daughter in 1999. Other celeb parents who chose the name Ava include X-Man Hugh Jackman and TV star Heather Locklear.

But if you think the Federlines were the first celeb couple to go with the name Jayden, you are mistaken. Jaden (and its various spellings) first started appearing on BabyNames.com lists after Will Smith and Jada Pinkett chose the name for their son back in 1998.

"It usually takes 3-4 years for a new name to make it from the celebrities to the masses," says Moss, "and that's only if the names are not too wild!"

So although Pilot Inspektor and Fifi Trixibelle will probably not be topping the charts anytime soon, keep an eye out for Suri [Cruise] and Shiloh [Jolie-Pitt] to appear in the forthcoming years.

THE BABYNAMES.COM MOST POPULAR NAMES for 2006
BOYS GIRLS

1. AIDAN/AIDEN/ADEN = 1. AVA +
2. CADEN/KADEN = 2. ABIGAIL +
3. BRADEN/BRAYDEN/BRAEDEN + 3. KAELYN/CAILYN +
4. JADEN/JAYDEN + 4. MADISON -
5. ETHAN - 5. EMMA -
6. CONNOR/CONNER + 6. ISABELLA +
7. ADDISON + 7. BAILEY +
8. RILEY + 8. CHLOE -
9. CALEB - 9. OLIVIA +
10. LOGAN - 10. HANNAH +
11. HAYDEN - 11. ISABELLE/ISABEL +
12. DYLAN - 12. GRACE +
13. NOAH - 13. ELLA +
14. AVERY + 14. ABBY/ABBIE +
15. JACOB - 15. CADENCE -
16. RYAN - 16. ALEXIS -
17. CAMERON - 17. TAYLOR -
18. ALEXANDER + 18. PAIGE +
19. AARON + 19. HAILEY -
20. TRISTAN + 20. EMILY -

+ Increased position from 2005
- Decreased position from 2005
= Same rank as 2005

Please do feel free to leave me a comment and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.

Technorati Tags:
, , , ,
Comments:
Blogger Unknown said...

Name is extremely important. Name is your life! It is how you identify yourself. It is how others identify you. The more insight you have into the powerful influence of your name, the greater opportunity to enjoy the success you are capable of achieving.
Naming your baby is something that you'll have to live with the rest of your life, and so will the baby. So, keep in mind these hints when picking a name for your new bundle of joy. Beware, fetal names stick! Jellybean and Ladybug are cute names, no doubt. Remember what you name your fetus will come out of your mouth postpartum! How does the name sound? Does it roll off of your tongue, or get stuck there?
Don't choose the name of your least favorite person or a name that brings up bad memories for you. Me and my husband both love Priya, but then we know this woman... Trust me, our future daughter's are better off not being named Priya. The same applies for the names of ex-girlfriends, boyfriends and relatives.
Avoid the same name. While I strongly believe in naming children for family lines and traditions. It can be difficult to have a Junior in the house, especially when they start to get a bit older. Keep this in mind and consider giving the baby another name to go by, while still holding up the family tradition.

Content from http://allaboutparenting.blogspot.com/2007/05/hints-and-tips-for-giving-name-to-your.html

3:26 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have found index with some guidebooks similar to your blog content and would like to share. There are interesting ideas for parenting, family, health, etc. Get it and enjoy!

1:36 PM  
Anonymous Toddler Lesson Plans said...

This posting is nice.....Thanks for the good inspiration. Playing Printable Toddler Crafts

8:57 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Who knows where to download XRumer 5.0 Palladium?
Help, please. All recommend this program to effectively advertise on the Internet, this is the best program!

2:30 AM  
Anonymous Sherman Unkefer said...

Baby experts, teachers, and sociologists all say your baby's name will impact on his or her personality. They also agree that baby's ability to interact with his peers is also affected by her name. So a name is one of the most precious things you will give your baby.

11:16 PM  
Blogger Heather said...

Hi I’m Heather! Please email me when you get a chance! I have a question about your blog. HeatherVonsj(at)gmail(dot)com

1:12 PM  

Post a Comment

New Poll Shows Parents Afraid of Talking to Their Teens; Avoid Tough Topics, Especially Drug Use


Top Five Reasons Parents Don't Talk About Drugs with Their Teens. (PRNewsFoto/Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP))

WASHINGTON, DC UNITED STATES 12/06/2006

White House Urges Parents to Sharpen Conversation Skills, Monitor Teens'
Activities

WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- The White House Office of National
Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) is urging parents to sharpen their conversation
skills and monitor their teen's activities, after a new poll shows that
most parents have difficulty getting through to their teens about important
subjects, especially drug use. According to a new survey by VitalSmarts,
most parents of teens indicate that they are even afraid to talk to their
teens about everyday issues.

The survey shows that a majority of parents (57%) admit to having some
degree of difficulty in getting their teens involved in meaningful
conversations about their concerns, such as who their friends are, how they
dress, and how school is going. An even greater number of parents (74%)
have difficulty getting their teens to respond to these concerns and are
not sure their teens are even listening when they do talk.

And when it comes to tough topics, like drug use, most parents (52%)
admit to some degree of difficulty with those conversations. Even more
troubling is that parents know drugs are part of a teen's world today. More
than half of parents surveyed (56%) believe their teen goes to parties
where drugs are available and nearly half of parents (48%) believe their
teen has friends who use drugs. Despite that, few parents are doing
anything about it.

"This poll reinforces a disconcerting trend we're seeing with parents
today. Too many parents are avoiding tough conversations -- or tough
stances -- because they're afraid of jeopardizing their relationship with
their teen," said John P. Walters, Director of National Drug Control
Policy. "Parents must follow through on their responsibilities and set
clear rules against drug use."

According to the VitalSmarts survey, the strategy most often used by
parents to monitor their teen's activities is to keep the fridge stocked
with food so teens and their friends will be more likely to hang out at
home under parental supervision (52%). Few parents are checking up on their
teen (7%), asking questions to try to find out what's going on when it
comes to drugs (21%), or going through their teens' belongings (29%), even
though research shows that teens who are not regularly monitored by the
parents are four times more likely to use drugs.

And when parents have wondered if their teen might be exposed to drugs,
26 percent of them did not speak up because they did not believe their teen
would be influenced by drugs. Others did not speak up because they had
already discussed drugs with their teen in the past (20%), they worried
that their teen would deny there was a problem (17%), or that initiating
the conversation would communicate a lack of trust to their teen (13%).

"There isn't a more crucial parenting conversation than talking to a
teenager about drugs. And most parents feel entirely inadequate, so they
procrastinate it or speak up badly," said Joseph Grenny, co-founder,
VitalSmarts and author of Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When
Stakes are High. "Our research offers good news to millions of parents --
we've found the difference between success and failure in these crucial
conversations is a few powerful and learnable skills. Many parents feel
like they have to choose between peace and parenting, but that's not true."

Grenny has some tips to help parents improve their conversation skills
about drug use:
1. Keep your best motives in mind by asking yourself what you really want;
2. Make it safe for your teen to talk; state what you don't intend and
what you do intend;
3. Confront with facts about what's happening, not judgments;
4. Discuss, agree on, and stick with boundaries; and
5. Evaluate the dialogue to make sure it's a two-way conversation.

Parents can visit http://www.TheAntiDrug.com for additional advice and
information from VitalSmarts and the National Youth Anti-Drug Media
Campaign, including sample conversation starters and a tip card that
parents can download or order for free.

To raise awareness among parents and provide them with tips on honing
their conversation skills, ONDCP is publishing an Open Letter to Parents
this week in 41 local newspapers nationwide as well as select national
newspapers and magazines. Ten family and medical organizations signed the
letter, including the American Academy of Family Physicians, American
Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Association, Children Now, Dads &
Daughters, National Center for Fathering, Partnership for a Drug-Free
America, PTA, VitalSmarts, and YMCA of the USA.

VitalSmarts specializes in corporate training and organizational
performance, with award-winning training products based on more than 25
years of ongoing research. VitalSmarts is home to the award-winning Crucial
Conversations(R) Training and New York Times bestselling book of the same
title, Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes are High, a
powerful set of influence tools that build teams, enrich relationships, and
improve end results.

Since its inception in 1998, the ONDCP's National Youth Anti-Drug Media
Campaign has conducted outreach to millions of parents and teens and
hundreds of communities to prevent and reduce teen drug use. Counting on an
unprecedented blend of public and private partnerships, non-profit
community service organizations, volunteerism and youth-to-youth
communications, the Campaign is designed to reach Americans of diverse
backgrounds with effective anti-drug messages.
For more information on the ONDCP National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign,
visit http://www.MediaCampaign.org


Please do feel free to leave me a comment and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.

Technorati Tags:
, , , ,
Comments:
Blogger The Content Writer said...

Thanks for posting this info. I have two teenage daughters and I have to admit that we don't talk too much about things like drug use; mainly because I feel that they know and understand the dangers and would never do it. It's a good reminder that these topics should be periodically revisited.

2:09 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Nice blog. I totally agree with you that all the parents afraid of talk to there teens about drugs,suicide etc. Thanx for giving these important advice. I'll surely use your Parenting Advice, when i will be a parent.

10:40 PM  

Post a Comment